Refinished Mo 4/8/24
I saw the film on Amazon Prime last week and I happened upon the book in the stacks downstairs. I bought the book at the library book sale on Sa 1/13/01 {finished Sa 1/20/01}and then read it again on Su 5/22/16.
The film is great and the book might even be slightly better. The ending of the book was very chilling.
Basically, it's about a woman who falls in love (lust?) with a 'bad' man. The 'hook' is that the man she is attracted to is NOT the bad guy. It's his partner.
Lots of anti-women dialog in the police station that's probably right on the money.
Lots of descriptions of sex, but it's almost 'cold' and a very detached feel.
From the book's page at Kirkus Reveiws:
"Moore's latest ought to come with a warning label for unwary fans of Sleeping Beauties (1993) and her earlier works. There's nothing beautiful about this one, and you won't be doing much sleeping once you've sampled its nasty fare of mutilation, decapitation, and coldhearted sex. The narrator is a woman who lives in New York City, near Washington Square, and teaches creative writing to college freshmen. Her name may be Frannyone character calls her that twicebut it's never quite acknowledged or made clear. One night, in a bar, this teacher opens the wrong door, searching for a bathroom, and witnesses a red-haired woman's technique: the way she moves her head ``with a dipping motion,'' the noise her mouth makes; the man's black socks, his unshined shoes, the tattoo of a playing card on his wrist. The only thing she manages not to see is the man's face, which turns out to be a fateful omission when the red-haired woman is found murdered (well, not just murderednobody in this book is simply murderedshe's ``disarticulated,'' or pulled apart, joint by joint). The teacher is unwillingly caught up now in a drama that involves a serial killer, more gruesome death and dismemberment, and plenty of sex along the way, in every position, clinically detailed, with handcuffs or without. Where all this leads to is a horrific ending involving razors, torture, and the lingering smell of blood. In Moore's previous work, a good, dark undercurrent of sex and violence played well against the lush Hawaiian settings and family stories. Here, there's nothing to offset the darknessnot one real and likable character, never one moment of redemption. In the end, repugnant. That's what a warning label might tell you."
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