I base that claim on this:
http://www.sfsite.com/12b/gg286.htm
My favorite chunk: "Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse is one action scene after another, linked together to tell the tale of a man trying to find sense in an insane world. It's been described as Tarantino-meets-Christopher Moore-meets-Mad Max, and that's pretty damned accurate. It's cheesy B-Movie post-apocalyptic science fiction, supremely confident in its senseless over-the-top exuberance, and its devil-may-care attitude is contagious. Chock-full of "what the f***" scenes, it's one heck of a story. Once I started reading, I couldn't put it down again."
My sincere gratitude to reviewer Michael M. Jones.
3 comments:
I can't wait to read it, but I figured I'd start with Gun Monkeys, which I'm almost done with, and work my way up to it. I've also read several of your short stories.
Go-Go Girls of the Apocalypse wasn't partially inspired by a video game, was it? Every time I read about it, I can't help thinking about this computer RPG I played many years ago but can't seem to think of the title.
Thanks, JZID.
I didn't base any of GO-GO on a video game, but I think it WOULD make a great video game. If you know anyone at Bethesda ... hint hint ...
VG
Article on Tor reviewing it along with The Road
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