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The House in the High Wood: A Story of Old Talbotshire
 
 
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The House in the High Wood: A Story of Old Talbotshire [Paperback]

Jeffrey E. Barlough (Author)
4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Western Lights Series August 1, 2001
Jeffrey E. Barlough, acclaimed author of the weird and wonderful Dark Sleeper, returns with a novel as charming-and chilling-as a good old-fashioned ghost story...

Strange things are afoot in the town of Shilston Upcot. A mysterious owl hovers in the sky. Mournful voices cry out for a lost child. Townsfolk are besieged by nightmares. And only one man, the reclusive squire Mark Trench, dares to investigate the strange omens to face the truth: The horror has returned.

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The House in the High Wood: A Story of Old Talbotshire + Dark Sleeper: A Novel + Bertram of Butter Cross
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Dark Sleeper, Barlough's fantasy debut, earned kudos for its impressive recreation of the tone and texture of the Dickensian triple-decker. This second volume in his Western Lights Series duplicates the feat, immersing the reader in a Victorian pastiche thick with earthy characters, social politics and supernatural intrigue. Although set in a peculiar alternate world where modern civilization abuts a prehistoric wilderness, the novel focuses on daily life in rural Shilston Upcot and its disruption when mysterious Bede Wintermarch moves into Skylingden House, a brooding deserted mansion in the hills overlooking the town. Once the site of a monastery of mad friars, the house has been gossip fodder for decades, since its former owner was implicated in the shame and suicide of a vicar's daughter. Secrets dislodged by wagging tongues and the nocturnal activities of a giant predatory owl soon have rationalist Squire Mark Trench and his guest, writer Oliver Langley, exploring caverns beneath Skylingden and digging up clues to a macabre revenge plot. Barlough keeps the fantasy effectively low-key, grounding it in the eccentricities of a large, vividly drawn supporting cast that includes smarmy barrister Thomas Dogger and besotted bible-spouting stonemason Shank Bottom. Their vivid personalities sustain the multilayered plot through its subtly orchestrated build to a chilling crescendo, and affirm the author's talent for working a dark comedy of manners into an eerie Gothic melodrama.

Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

This is the second novel, after Dark Sleeper (2000), in a series, Western Lights, that is set in an alternative nineteenth-century Britain and has already been characterized as "Dickens flavored with Lovecraft" but also recalls Wilkie Collins or toned-down Poe. The plot is familiar enough: new tenants have taken the hard-to-let old house in the village of Shilston Upcot. They tend to keep to themselves, which, of course, sets all the tongues in the village wagging and speculating. Barlough masterfully works those well-worn elements toward a horrific conclusion, as archetypal but well-delineated characters learn more about the horror stalking them and finally take up arms for a fight to the finish from which only the narrator escapes alive. Very good but also rather demanding, because one needs some knowledge of nineteenth-century English social customs and a high tolerance for realistically depicted demonic possession to fully appreciate it, Barlough's series merits inclusion in virtually all horror collections. Roland Green
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 18 and up
  • Paperback: 336 pages
  • Publisher: Ace Trade (August 1, 2001)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0441008410
  • ISBN-13: 978-0441008414
  • Product Dimensions: 6 x 0.9 x 9 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 12 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (9 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,854,916 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Customer Reviews

9 Reviews
5 star:
 (4)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:
 (2)
2 star:    (0)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.2 out of 5 stars (9 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Delightfully original, August 17, 2001
By 
J. N. Mohlman (Barrington, RI USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
This review is from: The House in the High Wood: A Story of Old Talbotshire (Paperback)
Jefferey Barlough is without a doubt the most creative writer that I have encountered in the last year. "House in the High Woods" along with "Dark Sleeper", his first novel, is set in a 19th century Earth (at least developmentally speaking) that has been plunged into a dark ages of sorts, by an undefined cataclysm (although indications are that it was an extraterrestrial impact). At the same time, familiar fauna from the Ice Ages never went extinct; wooly mammoths, saber tooth tigers and giant sloth, among others, still roam the Earth. These differences make for a unique, and yet disturbingly familiar world.

However, it is not Barlough's surplus of creativity that sets him apart, rather, it is his writing. Everything about it is incredible: his use of language is superb, his pacing strings you along at a perfect level of tension, and his characterizations are without parallel. What I enjoy most, however, is something less concrete...he creates a world of detail that would be excruciating to describe, and that is yet fascinating to read. Every aspect of the characters' lives are examined: meals, style of dress, mannerisms, their surrounding geography, etc. Barlough definitely values the journey as much as the destination. While not all of the pages in this novel are directly pertinent to the conclusion, it is an absolute pleasure just to visit his world for a while.

As for "House in the High Woods" in particular, fans of his first novel will not be disappointed. While it exists in the same world and general chronology, it is by no means a sequel. Rather, it is what looks to be a series of examinations of a familiar, and yet fundamentally different Earth from a variety of perspectives. Of particular note, I found that "House in the High Woods" was much more disturbing, much more likely to keep you up at night than its predecessor. As the characters delve ever deeper into the dark mysteries of the small town of Shilston Upcot, the reader will find it almost impossible to put the book down.

Fans of "Dark Sleeper" will definitely enjoy this novel, perhaps even more than the original. Barlough's writing, already very solid in "Dark Sleeper" is even sharper, and the plot is much more engaging. To those readers new to the author, I highly recommend both novels, and I see no particular advantage to reading one or the other first.

Enjoy!

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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Superb horror, fantasy and comic Dickensian story-telling in one package!, October 22, 2005
By 
Paul Weiss (Dundas, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The House in the High Wood: A Story of Old Talbotshire (Paperback)
In The House in the High Wood, Barlough has crafted a compelling and unique novel that defies classification. One can say, I suppose, that it represents a delicious blend of Lovecraft, Collins or Poe's version of tension and horror, Brooks ideas of a modern, dark, urban fantasy and the very best of Dickensian characterization, complex and intricately described environments with superbly comic dialogue and story-telling. But to say that is to suggest somehow that Barlough's efforts are derivative and that is selling him far too short. These thumb-nail descriptions of style can only serve to whet an appetite and, I hope, encourage a potential reader to pick up a novel that I guarantee will be impossible to put down!

Shilston Upcot is a small town set high in the mountains nestled in a volcanic caldera which, like so many other small communities, has its share of dark secrets. Long-time residents like Mr Shank Bottom, a stone cutter by trade and the parish sexton, or Mr Nim Ives, the good humoured landlord of the Village Arms take exception to newcomers or outsiders seeking to open the door to any closets that might contain long dead skeletons. But Mark Trench, the squire of Dalroyd, and Oliver Langley, his long-time friend and confidant, have tumbled onto one of these skeletons in the story of a young girl, pregnant out of wedlock, who took her own life almost thirty years earlier. Mark becomes determined to get to the bottom of the story as he comes to believe that her suicide is somehow related to the untimely death or disappearance of his own father so many years ago.

I suspect that, like me, many readers will be quite surprised when they come to the realization they've been frantically turning pages on a novel whose plot actually moves at a positively glacial pace. But, they'll also quickly understand that it's the compelling, sustained level of tension, the superb characterizations, the exquisitely detailed descriptions of scenery, people and the minutiae of their daily lives, the masterful use of foreshadowing and exactly the right doses of the creepy stuff - ghosts, a mysterious owl hovering in the night sky, mournful voices, eerie nightmares, the suspicious house on the hill with the new reclusive tenants - that actually is what is keeping you awake reading until the wee hours!

Readers with eclectic tastes will be thrilled by this one! And the ending, by the way, is worthy of the finest horror flick!


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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars A dark and compelling fantasy, May 24, 2002
By 
This review is from: The House in the High Wood: A Story of Old Talbotshire (Paperback)
Over the span of two novels Jeffrey Barlough has become one of my favorite writers. Barlough's strengths lie in his picturesque depictions of a world in the aftermath of a great cataclysm (that either hasn't been fully explained yet or that I have unfortunately missed) and his marvelously vivid characters. Barlough's charming characters have great names like Mr. Nicodemus Binks, Mr. Shank Bottom, Miss Cherry Ives, and Mr. Alfred Snorem.

Barlough writes with a non-traditional writing style. Both of his current novels read much like a Charles Dickens novel. But Barlough's novels have entertaining plots too. In _The House in the High Wood_, Barlough introduces the reader to the small town of Shilston Upcot, which has a dark and mysterious past. The reclusive squire, Mark Trench, sets out to uncover the hideous secrets behind the disappearance of his father many years past.

I think that a reader coming to this novel without a great deal of patience will not fully appreciate it. Barlough's story moves at a leisurely pace with frequent digressions to explain a character's backstory. One of the complaints that I heard frequently with regards to Barlough's first novel, _Dark Sleeper_, is that the plot was subsumed by Barlough's characters. Those who agree with this statement will likely find much of the same in this novel. Those of us who enjoy intriguing characters and wonderful stylistic differences will love both of Barlough's first novels.

_The House in the High Wood_ is one of my favorite fantasies of 2001. Highly recommended.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
THERE were tenants again at Skylingden. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
ninth squire, clumber pine, capstone fragment, pale calfskin, gentleman rover, plated spectacles, boldest rider, present squire, inky void, damned foot, village physician, craggy brow, young madam, waxed mustaches, crimson head, old vicar, drowned girl, old clergyman, little doctor, abbey ruins, high wood, fifty guineas, rocky shelf, oak bar
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Miss Mowbray, Shilston Upcot, Charles Campleman, Prospect Cottage, Miss Crimp, Captain Hoey, Bede Wintermarch, Tom Dogger, Miss Marchant, Thomas Dogger, Skylingden Hall, Gray Lodge, Low Street, Cherry Ives, Village Arms, Ralph Trench, Mark Trench, Aunt Jane, Miss Cherry, Lake Friars, Miss Violet, Grim Forest, Miss Margaret, Cranberry Chase, Charley Campleman
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