Description:
  "Eating 'em was more fun than blowing their gnarly green heads off.  But why dicker when you could do both? The fresher ones were blue. That was  important if you wanted to avoid cramps, salmonella. Eat a green one and you'd  be yodeling down the big porcelain megaphone in no time."  Those are the opening lines of "Jerry's Kids Meet Wormboy," a  justifiably (in)famous Romero-world zombie tale presented here in a collection  for the first time. That gives you just a taste (heh heh) of the bold horror  imagery and witty metaphors (or shall we call them tropes?) that are  David J. Schow's trademark. Black Leather Required is a knockout  collection: 12 superb stories (some new, some reprinted), one short play in the  Grand Guignol style, an  introduction by John Farris, and an afterword by Schow himself. It's all beautifully produced by  Mark V. Ziesing. (Click  on the cover for a larger view of the dramatic cover painting.)   The stories include a remarkably sharp tale about dinosaurs  ("Sedalia"), a delightfully manic number about roadside violence in  the Arizona desert ("Bad Guy Hats"), the tale of a loathsome near-death ("Scoop Makes a Swirly"), and varied sagas of the recently dead  or the undead having a good ol' time. As Farris writes in the intro, Schow is  "like a Gothic Absurdist, an urbanized Cormac McCarthy, but with a hip,  mean sense of fun.... He punishes you, then he winks and punishes you some more.  Friends, I do this for a living, and I'm not easily impressed, but the can-you-top-this operatic exuberance David conjures with mere words is a cause for, not  censorship, but celebration." --Fiona Webster 
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