From the Bookshelf of Weird Westerns

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What Members Thought

Quentin Wallace
I had mixed feelings about this one. I love the weird western genre, especially with werewolves, as my first novel was a "weird werewolf western." And this book had some awesome ideas. A werewolf on a riverboat. Werewolves traveling around in a tent revival and adding more wolves to the pack as they traveled from town to town. A werewolf nun. Just some cool ideas, but for me it never quite took off.

The story jumped around more than I'd have liked for one thing. Also, part of the novel was writte
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Julie
It's only been a couple days since I finished this novel, but I find myself struggling to articulate why I'm leaning towards three stars. Premise-wise, it's a tale of werewolves in the Old West and features a badass nun/hunter named Eileen Callaghan, so should have been right up my alley.

Dreadful Skin is told in three parts, more like a set of three inter-connected short stories than a full novel. Because, yes, I really can't call this a 'novel': there's very little arc or development here, more
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audrey
May 10, 2015 rated it liked it  ·  review of another edition
Shelves: weird-west, texas
Such a complicated book. Let's unpack this.

So: Priest loves to experiment with multiple POVs. In this case, six. This does and doesn't work. It doesn't work for the first story because we have five POVs thrown at us from the get-go, and then they're winnowed away as they're killed, but oy five POVs. It does work in that I see what she was going for with setting up five POVs who are then killed off one by one to narrow and focus the narrative.

Killing off five POVs doesn't narrow and focus the nar
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Mike
Dec 25, 2012 marked it as to-read
Ashe Armstrong
May 12, 2015 marked it as to-read
Shelves: weird-west
Jennifer Monsen
Jan 06, 2017 marked it as to-read