10 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Mystery, Fantasy, and the Ultimate Heroine!, Sep 17 2004
By K. Brown "El Rudo Lucky Pierre!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Hoodtown: A Lucha-noir Novel (Paperback)
When I came across this book, I picked it up, thinking it was a cute idea: a masked detective named X, who lives in a city of people whose identity lies in the masks they wear. I was pleasantly surprised to find out my "cute idea" thought was one of the biggest understatements my mind ever told me.
This is not just a great book focusing on pro wrestling (more specifically, Lucha Libre, the Mexican Style of Pro Wrestling), this is not just a great crime novel, this is not just just a great fantasy tale; this is a great novel that encompasses all these genres!
Christ Faust tells the story of Ms. X, a former luchadora (lady wrestler) who fell from grace in the professional Lucha Libre world, and now resides in Hoodtown, her old stomping grounds. Here she makes a modest living, still as a luchadora, but as a private luchadora, who dishes out hourly sessions to masochistic men who are thrilled to be smacked around by Ms. X.
Her new routine is interrupted when masked prostitutes in Hoodtown are found not only murdered, but left unmasked, which is every bit as horrible in itself as death. Ms. X becomes a self taught private eye searching for the killer since the police ---who do not reside in Hoodtown, and like most maskless people in this novel's society, spit upon masked folks as members of the lowest caste--- are nonchalant about finding the murderer.
Of all the great things I can say about this story, what floored me most is Christa Faust's ability to create a gritty but sexy heroine in Ms. X, and in quite a way that I've never seen before. X is no glamour girl, but a rubenesque middle-aged woman with aches & battle scars from her former professional life. Rather than turning her into a one-dimensional asexual gritty character, Faust's erotic segments brings out X's raw sexuality in a way the reader will find alluring. It seems like so much erotica is based on glamorous folk with lilywhite skin and flawless bods; Faust does an enviable job of taking a down-to-earth character with flaws, but still painting a sensual figure that will make any man wish that X was a real life woman they could meet in the flesh. For fans of Japanese Womens' wrestling, picture Bull Nakano as a detective!{Sigh!}
This is also the best novel I have ever read that is based on professional wrestling. I have read one or two decent wrestling novels, a few mind-numbingly horrid wrestling novels, but this is the first great pro wrestling novel I have encountered.
7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Good Fight, All Right!, Jan 7 2005
By Jessica Melusine - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Hoodtown: A Lucha-noir Novel (Paperback)
So, mystery fiction getting you down?
Alternate worlds seem like the same old thing?
I suggest you take the first exit to _Hoodtown_, and like the masked comabtants in the novel, it will rock your world. Faust's innovative, taut, suspensful and sexy novel is like nothing you have read before.
Like Hoodtown itself, it's a rich blend of cultural references from hardboiled noir fiction to the dazzling world of Mexican wrestling. (There's also a pinch or two of hot sex with searingly raw emotion--it brings out the flavor.) . Like the Mexican/Japanese dishes savored by the characters, this mix is exotic and delicious.
Faust's heroine X is truly a divine creation--an older woman with A Past who has seen better days, an ex-villan with a violent streak,a tender heart and a bum knee. The plot she unravels combines terror, excitement and human drama in an imagined world that simply hums and crackles with life. I didn't want this novel to end, even when I knew that as in all crime stories, the showdown was inevitable.
Here's hoping that this isn't Faust's only visit to Hoodtown; I certainly want to know what other stories are on these streets.
4 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
I want to live in Hoodtown!, Nov 28 2004
By David C. Buscemi "Me read good!" - Published on Amazon.com
This review is from: Hoodtown: A Lucha-noir Novel (Paperback)
One evening, I took a nice hot bath and cracked open "Hoodtown" with the intent of reading the first two or three chapters. Next thing I know it's two hours later, I've finished the book and my bath is now ice cold. I woke up the next morning very, very sick. For this, I blame Christa Faust. Her book is impossible to put down. There's not enough space to go into plot details (see book description above), but let me tell you that Ms.Faust has created a completely engrossing world of masked heroes, serial killers, midget pimps, savage violence, and rough sex. Once you've finished the book, you'll want to visit Hoodtown to buy some churros, a souvenir mask or some hot masked lovin'. ;)