Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Kill the Mall
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
8 posts | 3 read | 6 to read
Douglas Adams meets David Lynch in this witty yet horror-tinged fable about one of North America's scariest inventions--the local mall. After writing a letter in praise of "malls," our eccentric narrator is offered a "residency" at a shabby suburban shopping centre. His mission: to occupy the mall for several weeks, splitting his time between "making work" and "engaging the public," all while chronicling his adventures in weekly progress reports. Before long, a series of strange after-hour events rattles our hero, and he sets forth on a nightly quest to untangle the mysterious forces at play in the mall's unmapped recesses. Things quickly get hairy, and our narrator's optimism about his mall residency descends into doubt, and then into a full-blown phantasmagoria of horror and (possibly) murder. With the aid of a weird and wonderful cast of mall-dwelling misfits--including a pony named Gary--our narrator is forced to conclude that the mall may not be the temple of consumer bliss he initially imagined, but something far more sinister. And who, or what, is benefitting from its existence? Pasha Malla's creative genius shines in this madcap work of horror-fantasy--a cutting critique of capitalism as embodied in the fading local mall.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
review
Lindy
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image
Pickpick

Hilarious weekly progress reports is about all the literary output our narrator can manage when he embarks on a 2-month residency at a shopping mall infested with sentient hair. He investigates a murder, swallows a pair of ghosts & attempts to instigate an uprising against evil. His battle cry: A little help, please? His self-delusional soul searching is silly yet somehow poignant. Absurd #CanLit for fans of Kafka, Suzette Mayr & Grady Hendrix.

Lindy @Reggie I think you might like this. 😊 3y
Reggie I will check it out. Thanks, Lindy! ☺️ 3y
Lindy @Reggie 🤗👻💀 3y
38 likes1 stack add4 comments
quote
Lindy
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image

For there is only so much space in my heart to admire any species other than my own, and that space is currently carved into the shape of a horse. (Try to cram an elephant in there and I‘d need an angioplasty.)

TheSpineView ❤🐎 3y
Lindy @TheSpineView My niece loves her horses. 😊 3y
Leftcoastzen ❤️👏 3y
Cathythoughts Wow ❤️ 3y
35 likes4 comments
quote
Lindy
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image

…every now and then I did glimpse a “personal” plate, featuring some odd combination of letters and numbers encrypted into a slogan or epithet
(BOY 1DER, I DOMN8, 2GUD4U, etc). These flashes of ego would have provided helpful signposts amid all that anonymity if their arrogance weren‘t so generic and uniform.

quote
Lindy
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla

And after several days of said scheming I had schemed a scheme so brilliant, so cunning, so unexpected (especially to myself) that, glutted with nerve, I dared to utter my favourite phrase …
Vengeance is mine, I whispered into the shadows. Or if not quite “whispered,” exactly, then mouthed, or at the least very loudly thought.

24 likes1 stack add
quote
Lindy
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image

The bathroom seemed somehow detached from the mall—& perhaps the universe. An antechamber. A vestibule of the soul with its atmosphere of purity & sanitation, its soothing antiseptic odour of chlorine. And in it I too detached from the world—& then myself. I lost all sense of time & space. I forgot my purpose. I was airy & unburdened, adrift. I gazed into all that light & had no thoughts, none at all, & the trance was broken only when the ⬇️

Lindy [Continued] toilets came alive with a roar and their contents were vacuumed into the bowels of the mall. 3y
Centique I remember when I worked in a mall for a couple of years, the bathrooms absolutely seemed like a tiny “other” world where the colour and chaos of the mall disappeared into a white vacuum. This rings so true! 3y
Lindy @Centique Ha! I hope the mall you worked in wasn‘t like the book‘s accursed mall in any other way. 😉 3y
Centique @Lindy I must read it and find out for sure! Did you read Finna? It‘s kind of a cursed IKEA narrative, a gem of a book. 3y
Lindy @Centique No, I haven‘t read Finna but it sounds like a good pairing for Kill the Mall. 👍 3y
25 likes5 comments
quote
Lindy
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image

And guileless yet full of guile, feckless yet full of feck, shiftless yet shifty, affectless yet affected, baseless yet base, shameless yet shameful, bloodless yet bloody, headless yet heady, footless yet afoot (at something), good for nothing, bad to the bone, best ignored, worst ever, mediocre, mundane, unexceptional, exceptionally awful, awfully terrible, terribly horrible—and just really, really bad.

25 likes2 stack adds
review
StaceyKondla
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image
Pickpick

This book is weird and hilarious. Hilariously weird. Weirdly hilarious. Just read it. Highly recommended

55 likes3 stack adds
review
candority
Kill the Mall | Pasha Malla
post image
Panpan

I really don‘t know what I just read… Kill the Mall started strong – our unnamed narrator has just been offered a “residency” at a mall, during which he will live in an unused storefront and will spend his time “making work” and “engaging the public.” For the self-proclaimed lover of malls, the residency seems like a dream come true, but soon enough it becomes clear that this mall is not what it seems as strange things start happening around him⬇️

candority I enjoyed the way the mall became a character and the first hints of horror, but the story quickly became too absurd for my liking. I had no idea what was happening for most of it and could not figure out if the mall was actually evil or if the narrator was just spiraling into insanity. Perhaps both is true. By the end, I was just glad it was done. I‘m sure there is an audience for this book, but unfortunately, I am not part of it. 1⭐️ #NetGalley 3y
103 likes1 comment