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THE BLACK LODGE. [Hardcover]

Robert. Weinberg (Author)
4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Product Details

  • Hardcover
  • Publisher: Newark, NJ: The Wildside Press, (1991)
  • ASIN: B002HE5Q4C
  • Average Customer Review: 4.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)

More About the Author

I was born on August 29, 1946, making me one of the famous "baby boomer" generation. I attended Hillside High School in New Jersey, then got my B.S. degree in mathematics at Stevens Institute of Technology. I later obtained by M.S. in mathematics at Fairleigh Dickinson University, where I taught math for two years. I was working on my Ph.D. in Number Theory at the Illinois Institute of Technology in Chicago when I met my (future) wife Phyllis in 1972. We were married in 1973 and I left college to start my own business. I ran three very successful corporations after leaving college and did some writing on the side. When I was 40, I decided I wanted to concentrate more on writing fiction, which I had done in college but had abandoned afterwards. So I started writing novels in 1986. My first book, THE DEVIL'S AUCTION, was published in 1998 and I've written another 15 novels since then. I'm probably best known as the author of a popular trilogy I wrote for White Wolf Games entitled THE MASQUERADE OF THE RED DEATH. These three novels have been published in a number of different languages (including French, German, Spanish and Hungarian) and I've gotten well over 1,000 fan letters about them since they first appeared.

I also have written 17 non-fiction books, many of them in the pop-science field with my friend, Lois H. Gresh. And, in my spare time, I've edited around 150 anthologies. I like to keep busy!


 

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Average Customer Review
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars 3 and a half stars for this cool horror/detective hybrid, May 22, 2006
By 
H. Bala "Me Too Can Read" (Just moved to posh Marina Del Rey, CA - where if you drop a quarter, why, you just keep on walking) - See all my reviews
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This review is from: Black Lodge (Paperback)
Robert Weinberg has been nominated for the Hugo and the Balrog and is a two-time winner of the World Fantasy Award, as well as the recipient of a Bram Stoker Award, so it sucks that he's only written 16 full-length novels. I've enjoyed his light fantasy series (A Logical Magician and A Calculated Magic) and his classic horror The Devil's Auction is one my all-time favorites.

The Black Lodge (first published in 1991) is an urban horror/occult tale that part-times as a detective story. It showcases Sid Taine as the tarot-reading shamus and introduces a supporting character that is later incarnated in a different literary format. The story starts when Taine is hired by a rich, beautiful woman (of course) to look into her husband's shady association with a sinister society called the Black Lodge. But as Taine doggedly chases down his leads, elsewhere in the city, a faceless entity known as the Dark Man is hunting down and butchering more than a few lowlife characters. Are these bloody murders connected to Taine's case? Well...yes. The tension mounts as the Dark Man gets closer and closer to possibly violently doing away with the core cast while Taine and friends attempt to make sense of the case's murkiness and also find a way to defeat their seemingly all-powerful adversaries. It all boils down to a confrontation with the entire Black Lodge in the somewhat exciting finale. But that's all I'll say about the plot.

As a horror novel and for sheer entertainment value, the Black Lodge pales in comparison with the Devil's Auction, but then again, I hold the latter in very high regard. But, still, the Black Lodge doesn't lack for scary, diabolical fun. Most of the plot takes place in the cold, mean streets of Chicago and involves quite a few criminal scums-of-the-earth, thus flavoring the horror theme with a certain seedy urban element. The Dark Man is an unstoppable force of evil and, reading on, I wondered with dreadful anticipation how, or even if, the key characters will escape his relentless pursuit. The story is tautly written. Mr. Weinberg certainly knows how to amp up the suspense. He also goes into some details about the particulars of voodoo, several ancient European orders and satanism. Three characters I particularly cared for: detective Sid Taine, persistent, a tad psychic, and more to him than most of the book lets on; Papa Benjamin, a houn'gan of the voodoo Mysteres, getting on in years but dedicated to his faith (he loves Johnny Carson); and Ape Largo, ex-circus freak (smarter than he looks) and current bodyguard to the Bocar, head of a religious temple, which serves as a cover for a major drugs operation. Incidentally, in 2001, Ape Largo was resurrected in a Marvel comics mini-series titled Nightside by Mr. Weinberg, who made Largo a business partner/bodyguard of Ms. Sydney Taine in her detective agency (Sydney Taine, by the way, is the sister of our hero Sid Taine).

I actually give this book 3 and a half stars. While well-written, I couldn't really get into it until two-fifths into the book. The Black Lodge takes some time to introduce all the pertinent players and their relevant back stories. Part of my lack of initial interest has also to do with the early part of the book being focused too much on scenes of the Dark Man chasing down and offing various scuzzballs, for whom I didn't give a hoot. It wasn't until the monster threatened to target people I'd emotionally invested in that I began to sit up and take avid notice. But, boy, when the third reel begins, it's a non-stop thrill-ride. Ape Largo's various face-to-faces with the Dark Man alone will keep the reader on edge, guaranteed. So, dear peruser, if you get a chance to pick this book up, grab it, yell "Aha!", then go home and get set for a fun read.
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