Shatter by John Farris5/9/2023 More often than not, what I found there were gothic mysteries and romance novels, but occasionally some other stuff turned up. I discovered John Farris’s work in my early teen years, when I bought 50-cent books off the rack in the back room of the Woodland Park Library. I admit I don’t know much about the sub-genre - just the books I noted above (does William Goldman’s The Temple of Gold fit here?) along with the early novels of Harlan Ellison. Maybe it even grew out of the success of The Catcher in the Rye. My best guess is this trend was kicked-off by books like The Blackboard Jungle by Evan Hunter (aka Ed McBain) and street-gang novels. The six books in the series were spawned from what some reviewers have called the Juvenile Delinquent fiction era. Farris has consistently produced novels almost every year since then, amassing a long and impressive bibliography.įarris’s early success came from a series of books set at the fictional Harrison High, once a highly-regarded upper-class high school that’s suffered a fall from grace and now is populated by troubled kids in troubled times rife with crime, sex, and corruption. His first novel, The Corpse Next Door, was published in 1956, followed by mystery and suspense novels alternately published under his own name and the pseudonym Steve Brackeen. John Farris is an American author of horror, mystery, and suspense.
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