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No Doors, No Windows: A Novel [Paperback]

Joe Schreiber
4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)

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Book Description

October 13, 2009
When madness is your inheritance, how do you escape it?

Scott Mast thought he got away–first from a family haunted by a dark fate, then from a dull career writing greeting cards in Seattle. But now he has come back to his New Hampshire hometown only to find that his family is in ruins, his nephew needs a home, and a shattering truth is clawing its way into the light.

Fifteen years ago, Scott’s mother died in a fire. And now the shadowy circumstances–the bodies buried beneath the ashes, the lives ripped apart that fateful day–are starting to be revealed. The answers unspool in the pages of a peculiar old manuscript–an unfinished ghost story written in his father’s own hand that beckons Scott out to a strange house in the woods with a lightless corridor that cannot be seen from the outside. Here Scott Mast will uncover all that has been hidden–and perhaps finish his father’s unspeakable work.

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No Doors, No Windows: A Novel + Eat the Dark: A Novel + Chasing the Dead: A Novel
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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Schreiber's third horror novel is more of a languid, atmospheric ghost mystery than his previous page-turners, Eat the Dark and Chasing the Dead. Back in smalltown New Hampshire for his father's funeral, greeting card writer and frustrated novelist Scott Mast discovers the partial manuscript of a horror novel, The Black Wing, hidden in the tool shed. His high school sweetheart, the still-sexy Sonia, suggests he stick around and finish his father's work. Scott agrees, partly so he can keep an eye on his alcoholic brother, Owen, and adorable nephew, Henry, but a local legend with ties to his family history soon has him wondering whether the manuscript is entirely fictional. With several genuinely creepy moments, this crunchy spook story with a gooey serial killer center will please readers who don't mind the slower patches. (Oct.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

Review

No Doors, No Windows draws us into a fearsome, doom-haunted world that closes down like a trap. A knockout book!”—Peter Straub


“A harrowing, up-all-night read with delicious scares at every turn.”—Tess Gerritsen, on Eat the Dark

Product Details

  • Paperback: 276 pages
  • Publisher: Del Rey; Original edition (October 13, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0345510135
  • ISBN-13: 978-0345510136
  • Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 0.6 x 8.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 7.8 ounces (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.1 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,235,898 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I was born in Michigan in 1969 and lived all over: Alaska, California, Wyoming, all before age 10. The restlessness sank in -- after graduating from the University of Michigan, I just kept moving. I've lived in LA, New York, Philadelphia, Portland, Oregon, and Martha's Vineyard. Constant relocation forced me to be creative in my employment: I've been a pet-sitter, an office boy in a DC law office, waited tables and worked at something like six different Borders Bookstores...which has to be a record. These days I work as an MRI tech at Hershey Medical Center in Hershey, PA.

Customer Reviews

Most Helpful Customer Reviews
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Hallucenagenic Fright Ride October 13, 2009
Format:Paperback
"No Doors, No Windows" is intense, chilling, and at times hallucinogenic; a story of madness carried down through the generations. In many ways, it tells the classic Gothic tale of a house stained by a decades old evil, warped by the lingering spirits of the dead. Debuting alongside Schreiber's "Star Wars: Death Troopers", "No Doors" adds to an impressive resume, making him a name to watch in horror.

After his father's funeral, Scott Mast can't run away fast enough. Being back in New Hampshire brings up painful memories, and it's hard being around his failed brother Owen and his only son Henry. What Scott wants most is a return to his ordered life writing Hallmark greeting cards in Seattle; to leave the wreckage of his family behind.

When he discovers his father's partially finished manuscript, however, Scott refuses to leave without digging for answers to questions he hadn't even known existed. His father, the stoic Frank Mast - a writer? Not only that, the story appears to be horror, about an old house back in the woods, a place called Round House because of its strangely shaped interior.

When Scott learns the house actually exists, he becomes obsessed with uncovering his father's secrets. In his search, Scott discovers dark things hidden in his family line. An obsession with creation is a Mast curse, as they are doomed to re-tell a recurring dark tale that has no end...and no mercy. In a moment of foolhardy inspiration, Scott resolves to finish his father's story, but as he moves into Round House, so do the ghosts haunting his family.

In many ways, "No Doors" is the archetypal haunted house story: a place tainted by evil and family secrets, dangerous snows that lay siege to those haunted, and a failed writer who not only becomes obsessed with finishing a dangerous story, but also goes off his medication to do so. However, Schreiber tells the story well, and he layers his twists and reveals his secrets with the controlled pacing of a seasoned writer, making this an excellent take on a traditional tale.
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful
Format:Paperback
Deep in the lonely, cold woods of Milburn, New Hampshire there is a strange mansion called Round House. It has many rooms and many secrets. A young author, Scott Mast, has been drawn there to complete a horror novel that his dead father began writing years ago. Scott discovers a curse that burned the town's theatre, killing many, and has tormented his family for generations. A curse that involves the ghost of twelve-year-old Rosemary Carver and her monstrously evil father.

Joe Schreiber's "No Doors, No Windows" is a genuinely creepy ghost story. There are scenes that actually made me shiver. Of all the haunted house novels that I have read in the past ten years, this is one of the best. An atmospheric gothic soap opera, this novel has a tremendous amount of drama, tension and suspense that is fueled by supernatural phenomena. Each chapter ends with a cliffhanger that made it nearly impossible for me to lay the novel down until I had discovered the curse of Round House. The same curse that had trapped the novel's characters had also trapped me.

A novel within a novel. A house within a house. Ghosts that transcend time and space to haunt generations of a family. Secret rooms. Buried corpses. Disappearing bodies. Mysterious music coming from behind the walls. Disembodied voices pleading for help. Children in danger. Insane relatives. Schreiber is clever at writing nightmares. He knows what scares us.

Most of the characters in "No Doors, No Windows" are untrustworthy, shifty and as cold and unpredictable as the blizzard that ravishes Milburn during the novel's climax. Amidst the populace of substance abusing ex-football players, ex-beauty queens and other washed out has-beens, there is the main character, Scott Mast, who is sympathetic and admirable as the hero. He is protective of his younger, alcoholic brother Owen and his adorable, five-year-old nephew Henry. However, even his behavior is sometimes irrational. Ever since his mom's death at the Bijou Theatre, he's been taking antidepressant drugs. He ceases to take them upon his arrival in Milburn. He attributes Rosemary's ghost to withdrawal symptoms. In any case, Scott maintains a semblance of moral fortitude which most of the other characters do not.

"No Doors, No Windows" is highly recommended reading for fans of haunted house novels. It is perfect for Halloween. The enormous Round House, with its maze of corridors and rooms, gave me fond memories of Collinwood on the gothic soap opera "Dark Shadows." It also reminded me of the haunted Overlook Hotel in Stephen King's classic "The Shining" where there is a nightmare in every room. Scenes of Rosemary Carver's ghost terrorizing Scott Mast reminded me of the films "The Grudge" and "The Ring."

Other highly suspenseful, supernatural horror novels that Joe Schreiber has written are: "Chasing the Dead" and "Eat the Dark." He has recently written the science fiction horror novel "Star Wars: Death Troopers." If you enjoy reading "No Doors, No Windows," you may also want to read the following novels in the haunted house genre: John Saul's "House of Reckoning," Christopher Ransom's "The Birthing House" and Pierre Magnan's "The Murdered House." Recently published novels in the haunted house genre include John Saul's "House of Reckoning," Christopher Ransom's "The Birthing House" and Pierre Magnan's "The Murdered House."

Joseph B. Hoyos
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4 of 5 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars entertaining ghostly amateur sleuth October 15, 2009
Format:Paperback
Greetings card writer Scottie Mast leaves his Seattle home to attend the funeral of his father in their hometown Milburn, New Hampshire. Already entrenched inside their parents' home are his brother Owen and his five year old nephew Henry. A wannabe novelist, Scottie finds a partially completed manuscript The Black Wing written by his late dad buried in a shed. His high school sweetheart, Sonia Graham persuades him to stay in town to finish the horror thriller.

Scottie soon finds the location Round House that his father set the story line in. He is unsure why he rents the abode that doesn't inspire him to finish writing the tale. At the same time he worries about Henry under the neglectful care of his drunken father. Scot begins to find information that frightens him of evil doings in the late nineteenth century and recently. When the theater where his mother and uncle died in a fire fifteen years ago is being torn down Scottie finds his muse to complete his dad's horror thriller, but nothing seems quite what it appears.

Exciting and filled with a foreboding atmosphere of doom, NO DOORS, NO WINDOWS is an entertaining ghostly amateur sleuth. Scottie is an intriguing loser until he finds his muse only his inspiration is not quite what he anticipated. Although the atmosphere overwhelms the plot at times, fans will enjoy Joe Schreiber's horror thriller as Scottie seems to CHASING THE DEAD.

Harriet Klausner
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Most Recent Customer Reviews
4.0 out of 5 stars Not too scary, but enjoyable
I got this book because I've been reading way too much romance. Although it took me longer to read than most books due to a few dry spots, it took me a week to get half way thru... Read more
Published 2 months ago by Melissa Craig
5.0 out of 5 stars Best Yet
An intriguing, deep character driven novel that will sweep you off your feet and into the imagination of Joe Schreiber. Read more
Published 20 months ago by Skuldren
4.0 out of 5 stars A not-so-nice place to visit
Schreiber is a gifted writer and has done a lot of interesting things as of late. One of those things happens to be the work he has done with the Star Wars universe, remiinding me... Read more
Published on January 12, 2011 by TorridlyBoredShopper
4.0 out of 5 stars Another great effort From Schreiber
Joe Schreiber wrote one of the best horror novels of 2006 with Chasing the Dead. That was followed up with Eat the Dark, a claustrophobic tale of evil in an abandoned hospital. Read more
Published on June 10, 2010 by Tim Janson
5.0 out of 5 stars Great Read
There isn't much to say other than I really enjoyed this book from beginning to end.

It was easy to get into and kept me turning pages when I should have been doing... Read more
Published on February 14, 2010 by D. Rothmeyer
5.0 out of 5 stars Impossible to Put Down
Scott Mast has returned to his New Hampshire home to bury his father. Scott's family has always been anything but functional, and it's hard for him to be back. Read more
Published on January 28, 2010 by Jake Chism
2.0 out of 5 stars Almost good
the problem with this book is that its entirely foreplay. The climax is a major major letdown. This book reads well in that it kept me turning pages and the characters are almost... Read more
Published on January 23, 2010 by Morgan Blair
1.0 out of 5 stars Good pemise, poorly executed.
This book sounded so good. It started out okay but quickly fizzled into a boring, flat story. The resolution was horrible and rushed. Get this one from the library (I wish I had).
Published on January 17, 2010 by C. Bennett
4.0 out of 5 stars NO DOORS, NO WINDOWS BY JOE SCHREIBER
It's been recommended that writers should stick to writing what they know when it comes to writing, and what better character can a writer write about than him- or herself . . . Read more
Published on November 17, 2009 by Alexandro C. Telander
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