![]() ![]() He owns a video store called Max Overdrive that has recently begun selling magically procured versions of films that never came to be, like David Lynch's version of Return of the Jedi. He spent years in Hell, fighting demons in the Devil's own gladiator pits. ![]() ![]() But it also had brains, guts and a deliciously blackened heart.Īcross six novels, James Stark, aka Sandman Slim - a self-described "mangy nephilim" - has wormed his way into my flimsy excuse for a soul. It boasted all the requisites of an urban fantasy: Magic, demons, vampires and a half-human/half-angel protagonist. ![]() But Sandman Slim instantly gripped me in a way no other urban fantasy had. Granted, Kadrey wasn't the first to do this Jim Butcher's massively popular Dresden Files series helped pave the way a few years earlier. It was urban fantasy mixed with hard-boiled detective fiction. Unlike Metrophage, though, Sandman Slim wasn't cyberpunk. Turns out Kadrey wrote Metrophage - a book I'd heard about but never actually got around to reading - back in the '80s, during the golden age of cyberpunk. Six years ago I picked up a book called Sandman Slim by an author, Richard Kadrey, whose name was only vaguely familiar to me. Your purchase helps support NPR programming. Close overlay Buy Featured Book Title Killing Pretty Author Richard Kadrey ![]()
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