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Lizard World

By: Terry Richard Bazes
Narrated by: David Stifel
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Summary

A dentist from New Jersey, marooned at midnight in the Florida swamps, makes the mistake of falling into the clutches of a hilariously depraved family of amateur surgeons devoted to a 17th-century libertine whose discovery of an elixir has kept his evil presence alive for the past three-hundred years.

The author wrote this about his novel:

I was down in Florida with my family, visiting a zoo that harbors a variety of reptiles and other exotic animals. We were part of a small audience watching a zookeeper demonstrate how to put an alligator to sleep by stroking its up turned belly. Something about that man fondling that alligator amused me so much that it struck me with a revelation: I had just met one of my characters. Not long after that I sat down at my keyboard and began to wonder what kind of voice this embryonic character might have - and what he might want to say. After a while I found myself typing the following sentence:

“A sink had fallen on the Komodo monitor and busted up its head pretty bad.”

After that sentence appeared, the zookeeper Lemuel Lee Frobey and his Uncle Earl started walking around their family-owned reptile park named Lizard World. I wrote a half dozen pages, but put them aside and tried to forget about them. They just seemed so strange: I couldn’t believe this was the novel my capricious Muse was asking me to write.

But after several months, I found that I simply couldn't write anything else. “Take it or leave it,” said the Muse. And so I said, Well, okay, I'll take it. I went back to my pages - and the words started flowing again. That is when the dentist, whose acquaintance I'd made in an earlier little book I'd written, suddenly found himself in this new book, driving down at night into the heart of the Florida swamps.

After that I had a number of other hunches. Each one was an idea I found myself so drawn to that I couldn't leave it out. For example, I had long wanted to write about a Poe-obsessed horror novelist who murders editors: One day I realized that this psychopath had to be my zookeeper. I was also thinking a lot about alligators - and it occurred to me that perfume might be manufactured from the secretions of their musk glands.

Intrigued by this idea, I phoned the Bronx Zoo and was told by one of their experts that he, too, had long been fascinated by that possibility. That's how the perfume factory came into existence in my novel. Another plot element that intrigued me was the idea of a brain transplant. It dawned on me that the kidnapped dentist was going to be the brain donor, but I didn't know who was going to get his brain until I started experimenting with the voice of a 17th-century English Lord. I knew I’d found something else I had to stir into the soup. After a while I'd stirred in so many curiosities that my story seemed like the brew in the Weird Sister’s cauldron:

“Eye of newt, and toe of frog,

Wool of bat, and tongue of dog,

Adder's fork, and blind-worm's sting,

Lizard’s leg, and howlet's wing. . ..”

The potion had begun to bubble and steam - and out of it, gradually, the monster arose.

©2011 Terry Richard Bazes (P)2013 Livingston Press & Terry Richard Bazes
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What listeners say about Lizard World

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Full Throttle...

Would you listen to Lizard World again? Why?

I'd maybe like to read it again.

Who was your favorite character and why?

See below.

Which character – as performed by David Stifel – was your favourite?

See below.

Did you have an emotional reaction to this book? Did it make you laugh or cry?

Amazement.

Any additional comments?

Well, there's fantasy and then there's fantasy by Terry Bazes, which seems to be turbo-charged. Yes, I had to suspend my disbelief systems, sometimes to the power of 10, but isn't that what vivid imagination should do? I like books which make me think 'what just happened there?' and 'I wonder what happens next...'. Interestingly, I actually ended up liking precisely none of the characters because they were so really horrible, or horribly real, not sure which...and that was just the humans.'

Dave, England

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    5 out of 5 stars
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Mind-blowing!!!

Mind blowing. Jonathan Swift meets Frankenstein. Splendidly narrated. A bizarre world of comic horror. I loved it.

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If you like a good story, this ISN'T for you!

This is the first audio-book which I can honestly say was a total disapointment. Whilst the characters are interesting, the 'story' is confusing at best, and blood dull at worst. There seemed, to me, to be very litte plot cohesion, and it didn't conclude in any way at all really, it just... stopped. total waste of money, and I was hoping for so much more.

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