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All Signs of Death
#1
This has all the ingredients of being something pretty awesome and right up my alley, though some people are suggesting that it might be too similar to "Dexter." If this turns out to be a true noir, then those comparisons go right out the window.

<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->Alan Ball is "dying" to stay in business with HBO as the creator of the pay cabler's earlier hit "Six Feet Under" and current smash "True Blood" will helm the greenlit pilot "All Signs of Death," based on the Charlie Huston crime noir novel "The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death." The project will center on a knockaround twentysomething who discovers he has a knack for being a crime scene cleaner, and his life gets messy from there. Ball will exec produce and direct, with Huston penning the pilot. Production is set to begin next month in Los Angeles. No cast has been set.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

On the book:
<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->Web Goodhue is what many might refer to as a loser. A former schoolteacher turned full time slacker, Web divides his time between surviving off handouts and pissing off anyone he comes in contact with. Things begin to change rapidly, however, when his friend and roommate loses what remains of his patient understanding and forces him to take a job with a mutual acquaintance. This plunges Web into the bizarre and gruesome world of Crime Scene Cleaning, launching him on a frantic and brutal journey that will force him to examine his few crumbling relationships, re-evaluate his life, confront hidden memories of a traumatic past, and deliberate on the best way to clean brains and skull fragments out of shag carpeting.

The Mystic Arts of Erasing All Signs of Death is one of the few stand-alone novels of Charlie Huston, the popular crime fiction author responsible for the successful Hank Thompson and Joe Pitt series. Departing once again from his popular serialized novels, Huston has created a wonderfully captivating story of self-discovery and evaluation with enough criminally insane characters and violently graphic murder scenes to please even the most jaded pulp fan.

The majority of the book’s success rests on the shoulders of the main character Web, whose first-person narration guides us through his personal journey. Web is the perfect anti-hero, displaying anti-social behaviors and poorly motivated decision-making that repel the thought of emulation, yet with a level of self-awareness and confusion that never risks alienating the reader. The slow reveal of the source of his post-traumatic disorder not only explains his behavior without excusing it, but its revelation is a surprisingly human and believable scene, and a true testament to Huston’s mastery of true-to-life dialogue and the frailty of human emotion. Also, his sudden relationship with the daughter of the suicide victim of his first crime scene cleanup, while convenient for the advancement of the story, is far from contrived or easily explained away.

Nevertheless, this is a gritty crime story, and Web’s road to emotional discovery is heavily paved with ruthless killers, street-hardened hoods, delusional criminals, and a wide variety of inventively graphic deaths. The title of the book refers to the newly chosen career path of Web’s, Crime Scene Cleanup, and a good portion of the story dwells on the darkly humorous potential inherent in scraping up and hauling away the aftermath of violent crimes and messy suicides. From detailed explanations of how to get blood off wallpaper to the results of committing suicide with a pipe-bomb suppository, Mystic Art dwells in so much bloody minutiae that the reader will occasionally wish they had a hazmat suit of their own. Of course, this sort of detail could easily devolve into a tedious grocery list of factual data reminiscent of Chuck Palahniuk’s works, but Huston never comes close to overwhelming or boring his audience with the research he obviously put into the novel.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#2
i almost had a job as a crime scene cleaner a few years back. i heard they made good money, and we had a kid on the way so i researched and thought i had a job. when i met with the guy doing the hiring i think i cracked one too many jokes and they never called back
Life is a bitch, but she's totally doable.
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#3
Good story.

I dig the new avatar btw.
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#4
<!--quoteo(post=105123:date=Jul 12 2010, 02:41 PM:name=rok)-->QUOTE (rok @ Jul 12 2010, 02:41 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->Good story.

I dig the new avatar btw.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->

I do, too. Except, of course, Butch is crying somewhere.
Cubs News and Rumors at Bleacher Nation.
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#5
<!--quoteo-->QUOTE <!--quotec-->Six Feet Under and True Blood creator Alan Ball’s new HBO drama All Signs Of Death has been rejected by the network, who passed on the pilot today, possibly while saying, “Really, Alan? More death stuff?” in a mock-scolding tone that lets him know that, no, we’re all friends here, but still, the whole death obsession thing is getting to be a bit much. The show—based on Charlie Huston’s noir novel, The Mystic Arts Of Erasing All Signs Of Death—concerned a twentysomething slacker suffering from post-traumatic stress disorder who becomes entangled in a murder-mystery after joining a crime scene clean-up crew. There’s no word on why the network didn't go for it, although The Hollywood Reporter does hint that it will “keep Ball focused on his hit True Blood,” so we wouldn't be surprised if that’s a factor. One dark dramedy on the fragility of human life at a time, Alan.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
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#6
Damn. Too bad he didn't shop this idea to AMC. That would have been right up their alley.
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#7
<!--quoteo(post=122785:date=Dec 9 2010, 02:37 PM:name=rok)-->QUOTE (rok @ Dec 9 2010, 02:37 PM) <{POST_SNAPBACK}><!--quotec-->Damn. Too bad he didn't shop this idea to AMC. That would have been right up their alley.<!--QuoteEnd--><!--QuoteEEnd-->
I assume he still can.
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#8
Wow. The guy is an Oscar winner, and he's produced two giant hits for HBO. I'd love to hear why they would reject this.
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