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Meet New Hampshire couple Bill and Joan Hapgood and their teenage son, Matt. They have a huge home, many friends, and the glow of Matt's glory as a high school football star. Life couldn't be sweeter, right? Wrong!
Trouble begins when Joan's mother, Emily, accidentally burns down her own house and moves in with the Hapgoods. Matt is terrified of his foul-tempered grandmother, who refers to him as "Joan's bastard." Emily's odd behavior reaches a fever pitch when she insists that the bedroom of her long-dead (and much-favored) elder daughter, Cynthia, be recreated, prom dress, dolls, and all. The household's normal warmth vanishes, "the sense of welcome and comfort was gone." Matt complains of strange, perverted dreams in which the staggeringly beautiful Cynthia visits him, leaving behind the pungent scent of her Nightshade perfume. Joan also feels the presence of her dead sister, and has painful flashbacks to a childhood best left forgotten. A murder and three disappearances befall the small town, Matt spirals into depression, and Joan loses her mind. Throw in child abuse, torture, and a wickedly irritable ghost, and we have one whopper of a nightmare. Nightshade contains gobs of gore, melodramatic (and occasionally bumbling) prose, and a deviant, twisted ending--John Saul's famous recipe for family disaster and reader delight. --Naomi Gesinger --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 16 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Up all night...,
By A Customer
This review is from: Nightshade (Hardcover)
I haven't read a John Saul novel in at least ten years. I picked up "NIGHTSHADE" at the library, and I have to tell you this is a thoroughly enjoyable book. It's well thought through, the plot is delicately planned, leading the reader this way and that. IT's a whodunit, a mystery, a family novel, a thriller, a detective story, but most of all a true ghost story. It had my heart pounding at times, and I had to read the final 200 pages well into the night to get to the end or I wouldn't have been able to sleep. Well done, Mr. Saul. Well done indeed.
34 of 41 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Nightshade,
This review is from: Nightshade (Hardcover)
Nightshade is a poisonous European plant, also known as Belladonna. This title implies that something is deteriorating rapidly - the world of New Hampshire's Hapgood family. Actually one more meaning, I'll mention it later in this review.Let's start with the Hapgood house, we've Matt Moore, his mom Joan, his stepdad Bill Hapgood and his grandmom Emily Moore. Life looks great and sweet but it starts turning to nightmare when Emily (she has Alzheimer's Disease, a brain disease that impairs mental and emotional functions) accidentally burns down her own house and moves in with the Hapgoods. Then Emily claimed Cynthia (who is Joan's sister and dead) has returned. Moreover, Matt starts to have erotic dreams that Cynthia satisfies herself on him and leaving behind the pungent scent of her Nightshade perfume. Then one day Bill is killed while hunting with Matt and no doubt Matt is then accused to be the killer. Finally, Joan is trying to find the real killer and the story continues... The author weaves a fascinating prose with dark family incidents. Trepidation, dread, doom all gathering. It's a enjoyable read of horror and suspense.
16 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Not exactly horror,
By
This review is from: Nightshade (Hardcover)
Let me say this right up front: I like Saul's writing style. He has a way with words. BLACKSTONE CHORONICLES led me to this author, and I've tried several of his works since then. With that said......NIGHTSHADE is the second Saul novel I've read in as many weeks. I was extremely disappointed in the other novel, and NIGHT only scores a bit higher due to some of the darker family issues raised in it. The Hapgoods appear for all the world to be a loving, happy, content family. That all shatters quite quickly when grandma Emily, suffering from Alzheimer's and seemingly intent on making everyone around her feel lower than dung, moves into the Hapgood's estate. Constantly comparing Joan Hapgood to her beautiful, smart but dead older sister, Cynthia, Emily strikes out to totally deflate her younger daughter. Teenage grandson, Matt, starts having violent, erotic dreams that plague him. Then the body count starts to rise. What ensues is an attempt to create a sharp psychological thriller. It almost succeeds. However, too much of the novel is repetitive with some passages being repeated almost word for word. The PSYCHO-like feel to the story is interesting, and as I stated above, Saul creates incredible word pictures. Unfortunately, the villain is too easily figured out very early in the novel, and not a lot actually happens through a great deal of the story. In its favor, NIGHT is a quick read that could be enjoyable if you are looking for light suspense or horror. This novel brings out some very disturbing family dysfunctions. As in RIGHT HAND OF EVIL, Saul digs out those family secrets and weaves them in with the sinister aspects of his story. Child abuse, incest, and mental illness all come together here, but they are also all too neatly wrapped up without deeper inspection throughout this story. There was great potential for a darker sort of story. I give this 3 stars because of Saul's knack for word art, but I, for one, wasn't too enamored of the book overall.
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