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Henry

Henry Baum


Last Updated: 7/22/2009

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Gender: Male
Status: Single
Age: 37
Sign: Cancer

City: LOS ANGELES
State: CALIFORNIA
Country: US
Signup Date: 3/18/2005

Who Gives Kudos:


Tuesday, April 11, 2006 
Reviews

The first review was at Grumpy Old Bookman. The best thing came in a comment by Cantara Christopher: "It reveals the zeitgeist of Los Angeles with the understanding, even compassion, of a native son. It is the least cynical book about Hollywood I've ever read...I get the feeling that he's attempting to stretch beyond Raymond Chandler, that he's going for Flaubert. I think in North of Sunset he succeeds. And he does it in only 270 pages, and one hell of a last line."

Dogmatika review. Best thing: "A page-turner and an example of an effective piece of storytelling that should be envied."

Poddy Mouth review: "The writing is stellar...I think you'll agree it is not so much who influenced the writing; it is who this writing will influence. Trust me when I say that this book is one you buy and one you keep."

Compulsive Reader review: "Successful both as a suspenseful, engrossing thriller and as something more: a savage satire on aspects of modern American life in the vein of DeLillo's White Noise....Overall, North of Sunset is an outstanding feat of storytelling that will gain a wide readership."

A review at Myspace's Book of the Moment. She says: "Those of you looking for a fun summer read, here it is. North of Sunset has everything you need: romance, scandal, murder, mystery, contempt, happiness, fame and fortune."

Might make the book sound dumber than it is, but I'll take it.

N. Frank Daniels, author of Futureproof, reviewed the book on his Myspace blog. "A uniquely crafted character study in the style of Elmore Leonard mixed with the social satire of Chuck Palahniuk."

Randy Radic's Sound of Meat review: "It's as if Raymond Chandler had been summoned from the afterlife by the Witch of Endor with the words, 'Send up the greatest, most profane noir-writer of them all'--and up popped Henry. It's that good."

Mike Ferraro reviewed the book on LauraHird.com: "The cult of celebrity is a topic that weighs heavily on the author's heart and he explores it throughout 'North of Sunset' with a thought-provoking deftness and lucidity...in this classic smart thriller."

There's a not so complimentary but well-thought-out review at Ready Steady Book. He says it's a "Gripping, readable story." Read my rebuttal to his review here and his response to my response here.

Read my book notes for the novel on Largehearted Boy. He says: "The rare piece of literary fiction that successfully combines a thriller with a healthy dose of popular culture. As the 'Vanity Plate Killer' roams the streets in the novel, Baum's insights into fame, film, and writing are ever present and welcome."

A terrible review at Pod People that doesn't bother me at all. He didn't read the book as satire. Don't get why people don't see the satire—the book's about a celebrity who kills people with vanity plates, that's satirical enough.

A much nicer review at Podler.

Bookreview.com: "A must read Hollywood thriller."

Reader Views: "A compelling read, well-written and brilliant."

Odyssey Reviews: Five Medallions. "You will not be able to put this book down once you pick it up. Beautifully written. Buy it."

Winner of the 2006 Hollywood Book Festival Grand Prize

Listed as the number 1 self-published book in Entertainment Weekly:

entertainment weekly

Bonus: here's a recent review of my songwriting.

Authors

"In North of Sunset, Henry Baum has pulled off something pretty amazing: he has written a tight, pacy thriller that manages to lose none of its momentum, even as it reveals itself to be a savage satire on the narcissism, emptiness and ugliness at the heart of the Hollywood dream." Tony O'Neill, author of Digging the Vein

"The best Hollywood novel I've ever read, including my own." Richard Rushfield, author of On Spec

"A satirical, yet eerily naturalistic L.A. fable." Kim Cooper, the 1947 Project

Interviews

Dogmatika interview.

There's an interview with me at Martha O'Connor's blog.

Cesar Torres interview.

Excerpts

An excerpt at Scarecrow. Pages 178-181 in the novel.

Another excerpt at Storyglossia. It's the second half of Chapter One.

buymynovel

please
RW Hedges & the Larks

 

 As an Englishman you might think that i would be looking for the following in a murder novel taking place in hollywood ; street maps, close references, overtly descriptive and precise analogies of characters to the extent that i knew what type of lace was used to tie the laces of the main character and his dog. Forget that. It sounds silly. What i would like is the seeping magic Henry Baum seems to be able to conjure up in his novel 'North of sunset'. In an age where hollywood is so laim, it seems appropriate that we might start to ask why and what of these strange creatures that have such a massive effect upon the way we use our minds and hearts when it comes to those so called legends?

 'North of sunset' does exactly what we all might like to do and know of these weird and vile creatures. It shuts them down, turns them around. Freaks them out. I guess henry baum teases his characters in a sense, always aware when the time has come to pull the plug. When henry Shuts a character down, he makes sure you know how and why, but he moves on in a way only capable in vivid dream. Am i blathering? Possibly, certainly Henry would attract blatherers, they are more real than most people, certainly even journalists and perhaps the odd novelist too who had been over trained and wanted to sit around being picky and Gash malak. Anyway, i think it's a brilliant book. The end was not how i had a calculated and all the better for it. I enjoyed the deaths of certain twats in it, and though they were not real and didnt actually die, i like to think they were and they did. This is whats great about 'Henry Baum' His writing is filmic and it would be a great thing to see his book made into a film. People love Character assassination, and they love to see a good egg go stinky, wobble and crack. Thanks to Henry Baum i'm able to read a great american writer who's not dead. I dont review stuff often so i hope that settles well on your keys. R.w.hedges


 
Posted by RW Hedges & the Larks on Thursday, October 05, 2006 - 10:57 PM
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A.D.Hitchin
A.D Hitchin

 
Brilliant reviews.

This has me highly interested.
 
Posted by A.D.Hitchin on Sunday, September 14, 2008 - 1:29 PM
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