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Jack: Secret Histories (Repairman Jack Novels) [Hardcover]

F. Paul Wilson (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)

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Book Description

Repairman Jack Novels May 27, 2008

Ever come across a situation that simply wasn’t right—where someone was getting the dirty end of the stick and you wished you could make things right but didn’t know how? Fourteen-year-old Jack knows how. Or rather he’s learning how. He’s discovering that he has a knack for fixing things. Not bikes or toys or appliances—situations….

It all starts when Jack and his best friends, Weezy and Eddie, discover a rotting corpse—the victim of ritual murder—in the fabled New Jersey Pine Barrens. Beside the body is an ancient artifact carved with strange designs. What is its secret? What is the secret of the corpse? What other mysteries hide in the dark, timeless Pine Barrens? And who doesn’t want them revealed?

Jack’s town, the surrounding Barrens, his friends, even Jack himself…they all have…Secret Histories.


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Editorial Reviews

From Booklist

Although some may consider this a kind of prequel to his best-selling adult Repairman Jack series, Wilson’s first young adult book gives only a slim indication of the future Jack; here Jack fights evil occult forces while attempting to solve a mystery. Jack and his two friends stumble upon a body and a strange stone pyramid box in the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Things grow even more mysterious when the kids discover links to a cult of sorts in their very own town—and cult members start dying off. Most of the intrigue comes from the trio’s attempts to find out what mysteries the black box holds. The plot is helped out far too much by the fact that a sheriff dates Jack’s older sister, who shares what she learns with Jack. Jack. Blue Balliett’s object-puzzle mysteries (The Calder Game) are much more intriguing, but this does have some gripping moments. Grades 6-9. --Connie Fletcher

Review

Praise for Repairman Jack:

The Tomb is one of the best all-out adventures stories I've read in years.”—Stephen King (President of the Repairman Jack fan club)

“Repairman Jack is one of the most original and intriguing characters to arise out of contemporary fiction in ages.”—Dean Koontz

“The most welcome discovery, for readers new to the thriller universe, is F. Paul Wilson's Repairman Jack.”—Janet Maslin


Product Details

  • Reading level: Ages 12 and up
  • Hardcover: 304 pages
  • Publisher: Tor Teen; First Edition edition (May 27, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0765318547
  • ISBN-13: 978-0765318541
  • Product Dimensions: 8.4 x 5.9 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (30 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #689,117 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born toward the end of the Jurassic Period and raised in New Jersey where I misspent my youth playing with matches, poring over Uncle Scrooge and E.C. comics, reading Lovecraft, Matheson, Bradbury, and Heinlein, listening to Chuck Berry and Alan Freed, and watching Soupy Sales and horror movies. I sold my first story in the Cretaceous Period and have been writing ever since. (Even that dinosaur-killer asteroid couldn't stop me.)

I've written in just about every genre - science fiction, fantasy, horror, a children's Christmas book (with a monster, of course), medical thrillers, political thrillers, even a religious thriller (long before that DaVinci thing). So far I've got about 33 books and 100 or so short stories under my name in 24 languages.

THE KEEP, THE TOMB, HARBINGERS, and BY THE SWORD all appeared on the New York Times Bestsellers List. WHEELS WITHIN WHEELS won the first Prometheus Award in 1979; THE TOMB received the Porgie Award from The West Coast Review of Books. My novelette "Aftershock" received the 1999 Bram Stoker Award for short fiction. DYDEETOWN WORLD was on the young adult recommended reading lists of the American Library Association and the New York Public Library, among others (God knows why). I received the prestigious Inkpot Award from San Diego ComiCon and the Pioneer Award from the RT Booklovers Convention. I'm listed in the 50th anniversary edition of Who's Who in America. (That plus $3 will buy you a girly coffee at Starbuck's.)

My novel THE KEEP was made into a visually striking but otherwise incomprehensible movie (screenplay and direction by Michael Mann) from Paramount in 1983. My original teleplay "Glim-Glim" first aired on Monsters. An adaptation of my short story "Menage a Trois" was part of the pilot for The Hunger series that debuted on Showtime in July 1997.

And then there's the epic saga of the Repairman Jack film. After 14 years in development hell with half a dozen writers and at least a dozen scripts, THE TOMB is finally moving toward production as "Repairman Jack" from Beacon Films and Touchstone. The plan is to make Jack a franchise character. (Gotta tell you: all the years of this has worn me out.)

I've done a few collaborations too. One with Steve Spruill on NIGHTKILL, and a bunch with Matthew J. Costello. Matt and I did world design, characters, and story arcs for Sci-Fi Channel's FTL NewsFeed, a daily newscast set 150 years in the future. An FTL NewsFeed was the first program broadcast by the new channel when it launched in September 1992. We took over scripting the Newsfeeds (the equivalent of a 4-1/2 hour movie per year) in 1994 and continued until its cancellation in December 1996.

We did script and design for MATHQUEST WITH ALADDIN (Disney Interactive - 1997) with voices by Robin Williams and Jonathan Winters, and the same for The Interactive DARK HALF for Orion Pictures, based on the Stephen King novel, but this project was orphaned when MGM bought Orion. (It's officially vaporware now.) We even wrote a stageplay, "Syzygy," which opened in St. Augustine, Florida, in March, 2000.

I'm tired of talking about myself, so I'll close by saying that I live and work at the Jersey Shore where I'm usually pounding away on a new Repairman Jack novel and haunting eBay for strange clocks and Daddy Warbucks memorabilia. (No, we don't have a cat.)

 

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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (30 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

29 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Repairkid Jack..., June 3, 2008
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: Jack: Secret Histories (Repairman Jack Novels) (Hardcover)
Some minor SPOILERS...

Repairman Jack, today, is a paranoid urban mercenary who makes his living "fixing" situations. He prefers to live his life off the government grid, and because he's so average looking, he easily blends into the background. But when the fit's about to hit the shan - and the coppers and the government and the usual agencies just won't cut it - then you call on Repairman Jack. For my money, Jack is about the coolest cat there is, the best guy to count on when the devil's at your doorstep. There are eleven full-length eerie thrillers written about him (not counting NIGHT WORLD), as well as a handful of short stories, and if you haven't clued in to him yet, I suggest strongly that you do so. Repairman Jack is righteous!

But this isn't about Jack as he is right now. This is about when he was a kid, just before his path veered into weirdness. JACK: SECRET HISTORIES is author F. Paul Wilson's first foray into Young Adult fiction and also his attempt to flesh out Jack's blank slate of a past. It is the first in a new series. If you're curious about what Jack was like when he was a kid, or if you've wondered what made him the way he is today...well, get ready, F. Paul Wilson is about to start laying it out for you.

So this is back when Jack was 14 years old, a normal kid living in tiny, lame-o Johnson, New Jersey. But today is when his life starts to get odd. He and two of his friends, Eddie and Eddie's older and offbeat sister Louise (but call her "Weezy"), are traipsing about the foreboding Jersey Pine Barrens, mostly because Weezy wants to show them a stretch of burial mounds. Caught in a downpour, they end up unearthing a black cube carved with mysterious designs. And a corpse.

The kids actually think it's all pretty neat. But that changes. The corpse, it turns out, was done in thru a hideous ritual two years ago. Jack begins to get nervous when three deaths soon follow the discovery of the body. Then the nagging questions crop up. Why is it that only Jack seems to be able to open the box? And what has that secretive Lodge got to do with everything? What was that fleeting shape they glimpsed in the woods? Of course it can't be the mythical Jersey Devil, could it? Jack has been gently scoffing at Weezy's fervent assertions that the world hides a secret history, and that the enigmatic cube is linked to it. But now...

Although F. Paul Wilson tones it down to fit his teen audience, JACK: SECRET HISTORIES still comes with thrills and intensity. As usual Wilson sets a brisk pace. In no time at all I was caught up in young Jack's exploits. And, yes, it seems like Jack gets to do his very first fixes in this book. Note that while Jack serves up several dishes of comeuppance to the bad guys, his inspired retaliations against his bullying older brother are almost as riveting. Or as Weezy says to Jack, after Jack had just orchestrated a clever getaway from their mysterious pursuers: "You're scary, you know that? What kind of mind thinks up something like that?"

F. Paul Wilson re-introduces Jack's sister Kate, brother Tom, and his dad. We meet for the first time Jack's mother and Eddy and Weezy (whom Jack is half-crushing on). There's also Jack's alcoholic friend, Steve, who I thought was a boring character, even if his story arc does figure into how Jack stumps a murderer. It's intriguing (and a bit worrying), trying to anticipate how these childhood friends will impact Jack's future; we do know that, so far, they haven't been in any of the Repairman Jack novels.

I hesitate to label SECRET HISTORIES a spooky read. There are supernatural/sci-fi elements here, but nothing that frightening or chilling. Longtime readers are all too aware of Jack's eventual destiny as the world's champion against a malevolent cosmic entity, and that, in the Repairman Jack series, F. Paul Wilson is drawing closer and closer to that confrontation. It seems that the Ally and the Adversary have always touched Jack's life. Even in this book, their presence is felt, if at a more remote distance. There's even an old lady and a dog (a constant thorny theme in Jack's life).

The central story itself is fine and engrossing enough, but I really got into the minutiae of Jack's childhood. No surprise that he was always overfond of pulp adventures (the Shadow, the Spider, etc.). But I got a kick out of reading about his job at the Used Goods store, where he finds a certain book which would serve him well in his future career as vigilante for hire. In other books I've read of Kate and Tom and Jack's dad interacting with the adult Jack, so it's interesting to note how different and how similar the relationships are when Jack was so much younger. Jack learns some life lessons here, which no doubt had a hand in shaping the man he'll become. Even in this book, one can track Jack's evolution from innocent, regular teen into someone who begins to sense that there are things out there beyond the norm, that there really might be a secret history to the world. Young Jack wouldn't mind snooping around.
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars How it all began..., December 7, 2008
This review is from: Jack: Secret Histories (Repairman Jack Novels) (Hardcover)
Repairman Jack is one of the most intriguing fictional characters in modern literature today.

He's a literal urban mercenary, who takes repair jobs that need to be kept hush hush, or deal with things that are against the law.

Things that people don't want to have the police or other officials involved with.

Even though he's a mercenary for hire, he's still a very ethical and righteous man - even if he is what amounts to a career criminal.

Jack was created by the not only prolific but excellent author F. Paul Wilson. The first novel he appeared in was `The Tomb', which was part of his Adversary Cycle series of books.

The character grew from that point, and even though it took several years for him to appear again, he is now part of his own series which at the time of this review, now spans over ten books.

And they're all worth reading.

Mr. Wilson came up with a brilliant idea to introduce a new generation of readers to his pivotal character. He began to write a trilogy for teens - known as the Secret Histories. The trilogy deals with Jack as a teenager, and all the events that lead up to him becoming the man he is in the other novels.

Before I go any further, my usual disclaimer. I will not reveal any spoilers that you couldn't get from reading the back cover of the novel. I won't ruin it for anyone.

The first novel, Jack, introduces a couple of Jack's friends, people who were important to him as he grew up. We also are treated to seeing what Jack's life was with his whole family.

And, for any fans of the series, there are all of Mr. Wilson's trademarks, things and events that have been mentioned in his series that appear in the first book. A real thrill for long time readers.

Although many new readers, such as my son, will not catch onto the clues unless he begins to read the adult series.

The novel begins with Jack and his friends off in the woods around the town he grew up in. They discover a mound and upon further investigation, find the remains of a murder victim, as well as a strange artifact.

The discovery becomes the buzz of the town and with it other more sinister events begin to take place.
The novel mainly deals with Jack's history, which is very much welcome. As I stated above, we get to meet people that were important to Jack as a young adult and see events that shaped him into the man that he became.

Oh, yes, there was indeed violence, but nothing like you would read in the regular novels. The violence always takes place off camera, so it is most definitely kid friendly for younger readers. And there are no sexual situations or for that matter foul language.

A great read even for adults like myself, as it fills in a lot of history. I eagerly await the next novels in the trilogy.

5 out of 5
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13 of 17 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars enjoyable whodunit, May 28, 2008
This review is from: Jack: Secret Histories (Repairman Jack Novels) (Hardcover)
In 1983 New Jersey, teenager Jack enjoys playing Atari games with his friends, siblings Eddie and Weezy; his other pastime is riding his bike. Jack prefers to stay away from his home as his parents are pests, his older sister demanding and his older brother an abusive jerk.

Jack and his two buddies are biking in the Pine Barrens when they find an ancient burial site. Unable to resist they search for hidden treasure only to find a more modern but rotted corpse and an odd looking black box with arcane symbols etched on it. Neither Weezy nor Eddie can open it; only Jack can. They soon learn the victim was a member of the elite Ancient Septimus Fraternal Order. Not long afterward other members are murdered. Jack investigates the enigmatic box and the serial killings of the Order.

Repairman Jack teenage sleuth is an enjoyable whodunit as fans obtain a look at the strange hero's early life in suburbia. The story line starts a bit slow especially for those who know Jack as F. Paul Wilson methodically sets time and place more so for older followers of the series. Once we know Jack, the plot takes off as he makes inquiries that places him in jeopardy, but sets him on his future life's path. JACK: SECRET HISTORIES is a wonderful refreshingly different entry that targets young adults, but series readers will relish young Jack in action.

Harriet Klausner
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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
"Aren't we there yet?" Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
little red box, fire trail
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Professor Nakamura, Mister Rosen, Old Town, Pine Barrens, Old Man Foster, Quakerton Road, Mister Brussard, Septimus Lodge, Carson Toliver, Bert Challis, Miracle Boy, Anton Boruff, Hardy Boy, Steve Brussard, Weird Walt, Quaker Lake, Mount Holly, Mister Sumter, Harding Street, Great Flood, Jersey Devil, New Jersey, Assemblyman Vasquez
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