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October Dark (Earthling's Hallloween) [Hardcover]

David Herter (Author)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

There are hints of an interesting novel inside this overlong and unsuspenseful book. On Halloween 1977, teen film buff Will Travers flees a terrifying threat in the small town of Grenton, ultimately finding temporary refuge in the home of retired Hollywood model maker Les Deerton. The narrative then jumps back to October 31, 1931, when Deerton and King Kong creator Willis O'Brien teamed up to work on a project somehow connected with a stage magician whose relative was responsible for the death of hundreds in Grenton in the late 1890s. The opening of Star Wars in 1977 is a constant reference point for the more modern sections, but if Herter (Ceres Storm) is attempting to make a profound statement about moviemaking by computer vs. the craft of those like O'Brien, it's lost in an unashamedly derivative plot. (Dec.)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

In the small town of Grenton, where 13-year-olds Will and Jim live, 1977 marks a turning point, for Star Wars comes to the local theater. As budding filmmakers and FX wizards, the pals use the movie as inspiration for their own cinematic experiments until they discover something diabolical about a Super 8 film they’ve produced. Soon the boys become privy to long-hidden secrets about Grenton’s past that involve a stage magician’s murderous relative and a devil’s bargain struck in 1931 between the magician and legendary stop-motion animator Willis O’Brien, the mastermind behind the first King Kong. Fans of Something Wicked This Way Comes will have little trouble spotting Herter’s deliberate references to Bradbury’s classic Halloween tale, beginning with the same protagonists’ names, Will and Jim, and including the setting, Grenton—awfully close to Something’s Green Town. While Herter certainly could use more Bradburian elegance to pare down an occasionally unwieldy story line, he excels at creating a truly spooky, Halloween-worthy atmosphere that Bradbury fans, among others, will relish. --Carl Hays

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 542 pages
  • Publisher: Earthling Pubns; Sgd Ltd edition (February 28, 2010)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 097950547X
  • ISBN-13: 978-0979505478
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 6.1 x 1.6 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,503,001 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

David Herter is an American author. His first novel was Ceres Storm in 2000, which was chosen as one of the top 10 science fiction books of 2000 by Amazon.com, followed by Evening's Empire in 2002.

In 2004 he spent a month in the Czech Repubic, an experience that led to his Czech trilogy,On the Overgrown Path (2006), The Luminous Depths (2008), and One Who Disappeared (2012). Says Stephen Baxter, "[Herter's trilogy] has a richness of prose and a density of allusion and ideas reminiscent of authors like Aldiss and Wolfe -- and, incidentally, it is a page-turning cracker of a horror story. Outside his homeland, Karel Capek may be remembered primarily through his legacy of the term "Robot". It is Herter's achievement in this novella to lead us through the narrow window of that single chthonic word to a rich evocation of a fragile, doomed period of Central European history"

October Dark (2011) is a fantasia on Ray Bradbury's Something Wicked This Way Comes, telling a secret history of the fantastic film, centering on special-effects wizard Willis O'Brien's 1931 encounter with a magician whose career stretches back to the birth of the phantasmagoria in Post-Revolutionary France.

Library Journal, in their starred review, called October Dark "a delight." Macabre Republic chose it as their #1 Halloween Vector in 2011, saying "Herter's genius here lies in never becoming merely derivative while paying serious homage to Something Wicked. He gifts readers with original riffs on iconic Bradbury scenes, from the attack by a witch in a black balloon to a perilous descent beneath the city streets by Will and Jim. A paean to the childlike sense of wonder, October Dark is itself wonderfully imaginative."
Herter lives in Seattle, Washington.

Early in 2012 the epic conclusion to his Czech trilogy, One Who Disappeared, was published. Says Brian Stableford, "David Herter's trilogy, to which One Who Disappeared provides a spectacular and moving conclusion, does not fall; on the contrary, it remains perfectly suspended, sturdy and elegant -- and by virtue of its topography, it does not, like more myopic literary projects, taper off into soothing closure, but opens wide to an even vaster and more glorious universe of possibility."


 

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8 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Library Journal review, April 5, 2010
This review is from: October Dark (Earthling's Hallloween) (Hardcover)
I'm the author, and I thought I'd add this review from Library Journal, along with the cover material, and an excerpt from Jeffrey Ford's introduction:

[starred review]"This book has a distinctive premise. So-called movie magic is real, the special effects masters are its practitioners, and it's the only thing protecting the world from unspeakable evil. The novel tracks back and forth between Halloween 1931 and that of 1977. For movie buffs, that year could only mean Star Wars, and the film plays a major role here. Amateur filmmakers Will Travers, 13, and his best friend, Jim, capture something on a roll of Super-8. Their search for answers leads them to a reclusive model maker and a battle against dark forces. Filled with nostalgia triggers for baby boomers and Gen Xers alike, with an original story and the liberally dropped names of a pantheon of horror moviemakers, October Dark is a delight. Consider recommending it to mature YA readers as well."
-- Library Journal

SYNOPSIS:

From acclaimed author David Herter, a new novel in the tradition of Ray Bradbury's SOMETHING WICKED THIS WAY COMES and Tim Powers's LAST CALL....

Halloween, 1931. The metropolis of Grenton. On the ruined canals, a clock tolls midnight. Willis H. O'Brien, the father of stop motion animation, seeks the base elements of a new animation. And Henri Mordaunt, the undying Phantasmagoria magician, will soon provide them. An uncanny bargain is struck, leading to betrayal and dire retribution, and an act of cinematic alchemy that echoes down the history of fantastic film.

Halloween, 1977. For thirteen-year-old Will and his best friend Jim -- amateur animators and Famous Monsters of Filmland fanatics -- summer darkens into mysterious autumn, with a black balloon prowling the skies of their suburban neighborhood, and supernatural images haunting the frames of their latest 8 mm epic, heralding doom. Everything leads to the edge of Grenton's ruined canals, and the faded cinema palace where STAR WARS has been showing non-stop since late May, a gateway into the mysteries of Grenton's past, and to a secret history playing out on either side of the silver screen....

From Jeffrey Ford's introduction:

"October Dark is brilliant for so many reasons. In it I see the synthesis of the techniques and styles of Herter's other fiction joined with what seems a very personal authorial vision; an immersion in the world of 1977 boyhood. It's the portrait of an artist, a budding film animator and story teller. And in addition to the wonderfully rendered scenes of that time and place -- Star Wars and weed and eight tracks -- the reader sees the young artist's pursuits as part of an historical tradition of magicians who create life with light and shadow, from [astronomer Christiaan] Huygens to Ray Harryhausen and beyond.

"The historical research here concerning Willis O'Brien and Huygens and the early processes of animation is incredible. Herter relays all this so naturally and convincingly that even the times when he veers away from real history for the sake of plot, those manufactured places, people, and events are indistinguishable in the power of their presence from the authentic. As a writer, I'd often find myself going to the internet to find out if what I'd just read really happened in history. There were times when I was sure these instances must be imaginative and they weren't and times I was sure they were real, but not so. For me as a reader, in the long run, it didn't matter which they were because the story so thoroughly had me convinced of its own fictional authenticity. These connections form secret catacombs of thought that run through the interior of the story, making for a reading experience that continues when the book is closed.

"There's a scene in which Will and Jim (two characters you will meet in the story) play hooky from school in order to go see Star Wars on opening day. They miss the bus, so they go to Jim's older brother's place to see if they can get him to take them. He does, joined by his girl friend. The resultant journey is so well rendered with dialogue and description, revealing the characters and capturing the time period (I remember 1977), I felt like I was in the car with them and the scene was actually a memory of mine.

"There is so much more to the story -- arcane knowledge, conspiracy, a lurid automaton, a secret device, other centuries, monsters. Herter, like the stop-motion magicians of history, has brought a monster of imagination to life. Enter this dark carnival and see for yourself."
-- Jeffrey Ford

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0 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Beautiful book, May 17, 2010
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: October Dark (Earthling's Hallloween) (Hardcover)
I just received this book from Amazon.com last night. Haven't read it, but from what I can see if you are a fan of Tim Powers California trilogy and Blaylock's "Land of Dreams", this is right in your alley. I just wanted to comment that the book is beautifully published piece of work. Amazing paper, dust jacket, and everything else that a book collector like myself would want. Can't wait to read it.
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