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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovecraft at his best
Charles Dexter Ward is a young man in Providence, RI who is fascinated by antiquities --- too fascinated, perhaps. He becomes obsessed with an ancestor, an alleged warlock named Joseph Curwen who escaped persecution in Salem over 200 years before and fled to Providence. A unusually long-lived ancestor, I might add.

If you aren't used to reading Lovecraft, or...
Published on January 14, 2005 by ZombiKitty

versus
2 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars You Need a Bit of Patience
Perhaps a bit of this novel's history might not be amiss. _The Case of Charles Dexter Ward_ is a 48,000 word novel that Lovecraft wrote in 1927. It is his longest work. A handwritten copy of the manuscript languished in HPL's files while he puttered around with an essay on the supernatural and a travel book on Canada (for which he was paid nothing). Several publishers had...
Published on August 22, 2009 by Paul Camp


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20 of 20 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovecraft at his best, January 14, 2005
By 
ZombiKitty "zombikitty" (Baton Rouge, Louisiana, USA) - See all my reviews
Charles Dexter Ward is a young man in Providence, RI who is fascinated by antiquities --- too fascinated, perhaps. He becomes obsessed with an ancestor, an alleged warlock named Joseph Curwen who escaped persecution in Salem over 200 years before and fled to Providence. A unusually long-lived ancestor, I might add.

If you aren't used to reading Lovecraft, or other writers of the same time period, the language and writing style might be a little tough at first, but it is well worth getting into. Lovecraft leaves a lot to the imagination of the reader --- a device that works quite well in this story.

This is one of my favorite novellas --- actually, one of my favorite stories, even. I first read when I was in high school, and I have re-read it every few years ever since. I re-read it again a couple of days ago and I still love it. This is Lovecraft at his best.
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14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovecraft's most accessible horror tale, March 17, 2002
The Case of Charles Dexter Ward has long been one of my favorite books. Charles Ward is an intellectual young recluse steeped in antiquarianism (much as Lovecraft himself was) who discovers horrible secrets about a distant ancestor, one consciously expunged from public records and histories at the end of his ill-begotten life. Ward engulfs himself in a genealogical and historical pursuit of knowledge of this man, a passion all the more emblazoned by each mysterious discovery he makes. This ancestor, Joseph Curwen, was reputably a dabbler in the black arts who fled from Salem in advance of the remarkable witchcraft trials in that town. Finding refuge in Providence, he lived a reclusive, mysterious life, made even more mysterious by his eternally youthful appearance. A recluse by nature, he spent most nights at a farmhouse in Pawtuxet. A continuing series of terrible cries and noises detected from that farmhouse, in conjunction with a number of missing locals and rumors of brutality against Negro slaves surreptitiously brought to that abode culminated in a raid by local citizens determined to put an end to whatever monstrous acts the strange man was committing. No member of that raiding party ever dared discuss what he saw or heard during that awful night. Ward's knowledge of Curwen is greatly advanced when he discovers an old painting of him (revealing a face virtually identical to his own) and a set of personal papers hidden behind that painting. He then launches into terrible studies of the occult at home and abroad, then returns home to put to use the arcane secrets he has learned. His doctor and father eventually grasp the nature of Ward's actions and unite themselves in a determination to block Joseph Curwen's ancient ambitions and plans to once more walk the earth with the aid of his great-great-great grandson. The horrors they encounter in the pursuit of this objective are richly described and deliciously gruesome.

This story is pretty much straight horror with no deeply mythological overtones beyond those of necromancy. Lovecraft does an excellent job of always pushing the action along while providing a rich, deep, historical background of both Curwen and young Charles Ward. The ending chapter contains some of Lovecraft's most terror-inducing, menacingly evil scenes and is not to be missed by those with a gratuitous admiration for the macabre. For those readers who find the Cthulhu Mythos stories too strangely remote and otherworldly, this novella provides a more practical, more individualistic vision of horror sure to affect the reader more viscerally than do mysterious references to the Ancient Ones. Anyone considering reading Lovecraft for the first time would do well to make this book his introduction to the master of horror. This is everything a horror story should be.

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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A good old fashioned horror story!, October 11, 2001
By A Customer
Although The Case Of Charles Dexter Ward is one of the few old-fashioned horror books I have read, I found it quite interesting. The plot isn't as far-fetched as so many plots of modern-day horror stories are, but it's still fiction. The horror/action doesn't unfold too early in the story, but when it does you won't stop reading. The descriptions, in the book, of different regions are so clear and imaginable you will be able to draw pictures and design maps. The ending is unique, almost predictable, that's what makes you want to hurry-up and finish the book. Another thing I like about the book is the use of language. I think it goes perfect with the setting even though I had to read some lines over in order to understand them. To write this book in modern-day language would set it apart from other horror stories in that it wouldn't be as good.
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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovecraft at his finest, July 6, 2000
By 
This is one of THE Lovecraft stories to read alongside The Call of Cthulhu, At the Mountains of Madness, The Dunwich Horror, and The Shadow Over Innsmouth. No one writes horror like Lovecraft. His cold and analytical style somehow makes his works even more terrifying. It may be the shock of the rational scientific minds of his character's seeing something that goes beyond explanation that makes his stories so jolting, or the horrifying results of what happens to those rational, scientific, and inquisitive characters, like Charles Dexter Ward, who seek the truth and discover too much of it. But maybe the reason Lovecraft is so scary is because all positive human emotions such as love are abandoned leaving only fear. The Case of Charles Dexter Ward is chock full of fear and little else as it takes you through the paranoia of the American colonial days, through the degeneration of a young man's sanity, and through the ancient catacombs of an old house where something inhuman screams from the bottom of a pit. The mystery aspect of the story isn't too hard to figure out, but that may not have been so back in the 1930's when it was first written, but the journey is absolutely terrifying. Lovecraft puts pure fear on paper and that's something no modern horror writer I can think of has been able to do since.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Intense in the old-school horror style, February 17, 2000
By 
Carrie Laben (Brooklyn, NY United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
Lovecraft definitely proves his worth as a flat-out horror writer with this tale of necromancy, intergenerational creepiness, and New England spookery. Modern readers will find it more Blair-Witch style scary than Freddy/Jason style gruesome, but in my book that can be a good thing. (And for you purists, yeah, it's much better than BWP, I'm just trying to draw an analogy here.)

The one big fault to be found is that an alert fan may be able to guess the ending before it's time, but that's not strictly old H.P.'s fault, but more to be laid at the feet of the hordes of imitators who have made some of his best ideas into cliches.

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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Horror at its best, October 10, 2005
By 
This is the type of story that you sit back and imerse yourself in the setting. With each new tid bit of information the horror of Joseph Curwen becomes clearer and clearer. The final chapter however sent chills down my spine, as Dr Willet searches through Curwen's undergroud, antedeluvian laboratory. The dank putrid odors, the slime green walls, and the horrific wailing from the darkness... the build up is phenominal, and the pay off will have you sleeping with your lights on!

Great read, you will go back to it again and again.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars One of the best Lovecraft tales, June 7, 2002
By 
Mike C "motomike" (Richardson, TX USA) - See all my reviews
Others have summarized the plot of this excellent story better than I can; I just wanted to mention two things: this is one of, if not the longest Lovecraft work (and the best-structured of his longer works), and it was made (adapted) into a fair-to-middling movie called The Haunted Palace in the early 60's, starring Vincent Price and, I believe, Debra Padgett. I think they had run out of Poe stories.
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7 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars H.P. Lovecraft. The only one master of cosmic horror., July 6, 1997
By A Customer
This was the very first book I read, written by Howard Philips Lovecraft.

A friend had tipped me about H.P. Lovecraft, and when I was at

the library looking for fact-books about old scandinavian religions

for a homework in school I took the chance of looking after the author

my friend had tipped me about.


I had ben reading a lot of fantasy and also a bit science fiction

at that time, but this was different.


It was, and is still - I've read it many times over and over, an usual

horror-tale elegantly mixed with the special spicy cosmic horror, which is

so specific for H.P. Lovecraft.


I won't tell you anything of the story because it's very hard,

or even impossible to find the right words to describe something

so big and elegant without makeing sound banal and patethic.


Instead, I let you see for your self. Next time you're visiting

the library - look for Howard Philips Lovecraft. Or why not look for it

right away here and now. I bet you won't be able to put the book away till

you're finished with it. And when you're finished with it you just need

another one.


Other great short-stories written by H.P. Lovecraft is, among others the

strange "Color out of time and space" which is flooded with cosmic

and strange horror. This one is also totally different compared with

"The case of Charles Dexter Ward.


Please have indulgence with all eventual misspellings, though I am used to

talk, write and read in swedish.


P.S. Everyone who likes H.P. Lovecraft, and of course everyone else,

feel free to contact me.

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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Lovecraft invents the horror genre: "It can really happen!", July 19, 1999
By 
This book is truly for those who can imagine! Don't expect to find words describing the unspeakable horror for this is truly a work which employs the creativity of imagination to evoke the chill of dread at discovery of quintessential evil. Though I read this book more than 20 years ago, I still feel the bristle of goose flesh when I recall the descent into the final depth of the depravity of Charles Wards' infamous ancestor. Know the answer to what turns one's hair white prematurely!
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Obscure cosmic relationships and unnameable realities behind the protective illusions of common vision, June 18, 2006
By 
If you want really classic Lovecraft at the top of his form, then this novel is it. It is a good, tight, driven read- except for the extensive prose tour of his beloved old Providence near the beginning. Yet, even this detailed introduction helps to weave an unmatched atmosphere that draws you deeply into Lovecraft's world. This is an ode to Providence, and to those unobtrusive and unlikely heroes that would keep it safe from cosmic evil.

Lovecraft carries us from colonial days to the "modern" 1920's in this tale. We are introduced to the hidden brotherhood of dark magicians and necromancers- those to seek to wield unnatural power from beyond the grave and beyond the stars. So much concentrated occult information, or rather enticing hints of such information, is packed into the narrative. Mystery within mystery unfolds. Yet, it is rather ordinary men that are called upon to confront this inconceivable evil, even though it threatens their very sanity.

Besides being an extremely well written tale of supernatural suspense it also serves as a teaching tale. There is madness out of time and a horror from beyond the spheres that threatens to entrap and destroy the unwary. Do not call up what ye lack the power to put down. Upon this depends more than can be put into words- all civilization, all natural law, perhaps the fate of the solar system and the universe. Perhaps even more than this- all because one fool opened a door and there was no one there with the knowledge to close it...
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The Case of Charles Dexter Ward
The Case of Charles Dexter Ward by H.P. Lovecraft (Paperback - September 1, 2008)
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