15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Selling the Preposterous, May 13, 2002
This review is from: The Manitou (Paperback)
This is Masterton's first, and still one of his best. Masterton has an absolute gift for selling the preposterous, and making it entirely believable. He does so through dialogue and characterization, and I've never seen anyone do it better.
Karen Tandy visits her old boyfriend Harry Erskine, occult mavin and low-budget tarot reader to wealthy old ladies, because of a unique problem she's developed - a tumor on her neck, which to all intents and purposes appears to be a fetus. The doctors seem unable to remove it, and Harry starts experiencing paranormal disturbances after Karen comes to him for help. He, and a few initially skeptical doctors, reluctantly come to the conclusion that Karen Tandy is harboring the fetus of a powerful centuries-old medicine man about to be reborn - whose birth would first claim the life of Karen, and after, the entire white race, with his vengeful sorcery. What's modern science to do, against such a supernatural adversary? Why, fight fire with fire, of course - get another medicine man.
It's absolutely amazing that this piece works, but it's really great. Masterton never cracks a smile (until the very end), playing the situation up for real and sucking you into it so you believe it. The characters are fabulous, especially Karen, Harry - who appeared in the semi-sequel, The Djinn - and John Singing Rock, the rival medicine man to the rescue.
Masterton's stories almost always end on a lighter note, with the deliberate inclusion of a solution that is almost a joke, but the technique works because he's cluing his audience in to the fact that he realizes how silly it all is - he just wanted to show you he could make you believe it - and the concluding laughter he provokes is welcome and sympathetic, not denigrating the finely written novel at all.
The all-star movie made from this book in the late-'70s is worth a look. It's a faithful adaptation, though it doesn't work quite as well as the book due to some severe special effects deficits and a crummy musical score.
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9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Masterton's first set the template for all to come., October 23, 2001
This review is from: The Manitou (Paperback)
Graham Masterton's first horror novel introduced not only a pretty memorable monster (and hysterically funny film adaptation), but also the template plot off all of Masterton's tales to follow.
"A series of increasingly paranormal events leads a character (here one Harry Eskrine) to discover that an elder god (here one evil Medicine Man) is about to return and take over/destroy the world. As time runs out a team of sorts (here a well meaning doctor and a contemporary Medicine Man) is formed to try and stop the beast's return, but they are late getting to the pass and our hero (Harry) must do personal battle with the hellish entity to save the world."
It's a formula that works beautifully, no matter which elder god monster Masterton decides to pull from the shadows of fictional legend. That Masterton has a sense of humor about all this hogwash is a bonus, making The Manitou (and others) both scary AND funny. Highly recommended.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
The Manitou, May 9, 2010
This review is from: The Manitou (Paperback)
I got to know about Graham Masterton through his 3rd Manitou series,"The Burial",and like most of his fans,always wonder why he is not more well-known.In my opinion,he is indeed the grandmaster of horror , always able to shock you at every turn , and making you laugh at the other . Extremely graphic in his descriptions of gore and bloodsheds and exhibit humour in the face of adversity.
The Manitou marks the beginning of the series,and introduced Harry Erskine to the world.It may not be as gripping as "The Burial",and shorter too,but it gave you the worthy introduction it should,and you will never rest until you collect and finish the whole series.Personally,I think he is so much better than Stephen King.
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