Broken Bulbs
My first published book. Frank Fisher is nothing. He wants to be something. When a mysterious young woman named Bonnie offers assistance by injecting seeds of inspiration directly into his brain, Frank finds himself involved in a twisting mystery full of addiction, desperation and self-discovery. The basis for my graphic novel Tyranny of the Muse.
OUT OF PRINT
Reviews
"...a brilliant and stunningly original work..." - Alternative Reel
"…this slim volume is the bastard child of Memento and William S Burroughs, absolutely not for the faint of heart ...” - CCLaP
"One of THE best books I read all year, including the mainstream stuff." - POD People
…as authentic as they come, experimental without trying to be intentionally obscure, dark without making you doubt humanity." - Self-publishing Review
"…the absolute perfect spot-on portrait of the mind of an addict.” -The LL Book Review
“It’s gritty, it’s ugly, it’s brazenly experimental in both form and style, it’s allegorical, it’s satirical, it’s as darkly engrossing as staring at someone’s disfiguring wounds, and yet it also manages to be profoundly cathartic.” - Moxie Mezcal
"someone better make this into a fucking movie." - K.I. Hope, Author of hector
“Eddie Wright is an artist with a vivid imagination, a weird, Pythonesque sense of humor and a daring attitude." - Gint Aras, Author of, Finding the Moon in Sugar
"The characters revolted me and made me gag in some parts. Awesome!" - The Book Journal
"…disturbing and humorous, horrific and eccentric… a fine specimen of what insanely inventive gems would be overlooked were it not for the fine world of independent publishing." - Bookish Mom
"…the kind of read that will leave you thinking about its message and implications long after you’ve finished it." - Bookopolis
"…every single word and phrase was methodically placed to perfection to share Frank’s bizarre and desperate world. It’s a bit poetic, sometimes disturbing and challenging as each carefully placed phrase fits into the puzzle of Broken Bulbs. On a bookshelf, I’d sandwich it between Sartre and Denis Johnson." - Holly Christine, author of The Nine Lives of Clemenza and Retail Ready
"It is dark, twisted, gory, cringe-worthy, but most of all, fascinating. It is, I think, a story that speaks to anyone struggling to make something of themselves." - Quills and Zebras