- Hardcover
- Publisher: New American Library, New York (1946)
- ASIN: B002J05DSS
- Average Customer Review: 4.3 out of 5 stars See all reviews (27 customer reviews)
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Enchanting, magical, edge of your seat reading,
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This review is from: The Magic Cottage (Hardcover)
This was one of the most enchanting, gripping stories I have ever read. Unlike some of the horror Mr. Herbert has written, this was more suspense/thriller than horror, though it does indeed have it's horrifying moments.The story centers around a couple from London, Mike and Midge, who begin to search for a house of their own. Midge starts scanning the newspaper and is drawn to a little add for a cottage called Gramarye. When they go see the house they find out from the realtor that is being sold as part of the estate of a very old woman who lived there most of her life and died suddenly. When they go to the house Midge is completely enchanted by the little cottage, feeling like it is home. Mike sees the flaws that need fixing. Still, passion wins over and they buy the little house and work to restore it's beauty. They seem like the perfect couple who has just found the perfect home. Yet there is something strange and disturbing about Gramarye, Mike can feel it, Midge seems oblivious to it. Animals come into the house and eat out of their hands, they befriend a little red squirrel who comes in daily and chatters away at them. Wounds heal spontaneously. It all sounds pretty silly, but it is all part of the magic that is Gramarye. Soon the enchanting life starts to take a turn when they meet young people who live in a house on the other side of the forest behind their house. Midge becomes entangled with their group, which ends up being a cult. The cult wants the house and will stop at nothing to possess it. Thus begins the battle of wills while Mike tries to save Midge from the cult and his new home from their possession. Don't worry, I haven't given anything away. This book was a mystery loaded with magic and danger. It has ghosts and spirits, both good and evil. It begins by sparking the imagination, and the tension grows stronger and stronger in this well wrought story, until it reaches a crescendo that will leave you breathless. This was such a good book that I'm now buying the hardcover - yes, it's good enough to read again. Buy this book, you'll love it as much as I did!
4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
GHOSTIES AND BEASTIES AND THINGS THAT GO BUMP IN THE NIGHT..,
By Lawyeraau (Balmoral Castle) - See all my reviews (TOP 100 REVIEWER) (VINE VOICE) (COMMUNITY FORUM 04) (HALL OF FAME REVIEWER)
This review is from: The Magic Cottage (Paperback)
An attractive young couple is looking for an attractive little house. An attractive little house is looking for the perfect couple. When Midge and Mike find Gramarye, a darling, quaint little cottage in the English countryside, it is as if a spell had been cast upon them. They purchase this little cottage in the middle of nowhere, after a rather unusual negotiation.Warm and cozy, with an inviting air, Granmarye is everything of which they ever dreamed, and they thrive in its salubrious atmosphere. The days never seemed brighter, nor the nights more romantic. The local flower and fauna around the cottage seem to blossom right before their very eyes. The small animals in the woods seem especially friendly, as do its birds, and they all seem to want to pay a call at the cottage. It is as if the house had a positive psychic energy of its own. It is as if it were a fairytale come true. Midge and Mike discover that Granmarye's former owner, an elderly woman, had a reputation as a healer. They also discover that a local cult lives not far from them and that its members are reviled by the nearby townspeople. They meet a few of these so called cult members, and they do seem a tad peculiar. They also appear to be quite nervous when visiting Midge and Mike. The cult's leader, however, seems to want to visit very badly. Midge does not mind, but Mike has certain reservations, as there is something about that cult that just does not sit right with him. Slowly, a shift in the atmosphere in the cottage takes place. As the tension in the book increases, strange and creepy things begin to occur in the cottage. A change in its psychic energy is beginning to take place, replete with a mysterious figure in the woods. Slowly but surely, Midge's and Mike's paradise on earth starts to become a living hell. Spooky, mysterious, and, alternately, charming and chilling, this is one of author's best books.
3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Casts a magic spell, but wears off too soon!,
This review is from: Magic Cottage (Paperback)
"The Magic Cottage" is something of a departure from James Herbert's other stories, with more suspense than horror, very little gore, and only tantalizing hints of the 'magical realms' JH describes in so much detail elsewhere.This starts off as a very down-to-earth, slice of life tale of a young couple who find the 'perfect' country home and (very) gradually find the place is not exactly haunted, but definitely...different! The deliberate (some would say slow) pace may turn off some readers, while others will like getting a chance to know Mike and Midge. The two of them make an interesting pair, though their respective jobs (storybook writer and session musician)are an excuse to bring some rather uninteresting supporting characters into the story; Bob the stereotypical frybrain rocker, and Val, the comic relief 'trendy' lesbian literary agent. One gets to fall victim to one of the book's scarier moments, while the other plays an unlikely role at the conclusion of the story. The book, like the cottage, doesn't quite stay together all the way through. Despite Herbert's effort to make the Synergists interesting and different from the usual cult of one-dimensional brainwashed weirdos, they come across as...one-dimensional brainwashed weirdos! The book is narrated by Mike in first person, a device that I liked at first, but ended up wishing Herbert hadn't used. Some of the sentences are choppier than they might have been in the third-person, and some are rather transparent attempts to build suspense, all but telegraphing some plot points, as if he said, 'I didn't think it was important at the time, but I would in about 4 chapters.' I wanted to see more of Mrs. Chaldean and Rev. Sixsmythe(who seems to be the 'red herring'of the story, never really amounting to anything, despite some interesting characterization), and less of 'Mycroft' and his flunkies, who come off sounding like villains in a Dean Koontz book! One thing that saved the book for me was the small but important(not to mention enjoyable) role of Rumbo the squirrel, who certainly had more personality than the bad guys! Recommended for those who have read other James Herbert novels before. Not a good starting point if you're new to the author; in that case, try 'The Rats'
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