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Tooth and Claw (Rook) (Bk. 2) [Hardcover]

Graham Masterton (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)


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Book Description

Rook August 1, 1997
College teacher Jim Rook has a special talent: a near-death experience in childhood gave him the facility to see ghosts and spirits that nobody else can see.

Into his remedial English class at West Grove Community College comes Susan White Bird, the daughter of a Navajo Indian. Susan is beautiful and shy, but all her life she has been closely protected by her two older brothers, Sam and George. And when college senior Brad Dolman takes a fancy to Susan, there are frightening consequences. Brad's body is found one morning in his automobile, his face and body terribly mutilated - almost as if he has been attacked by a wild animal - and it is Susan's brothers who are immediately arrested.

Only when two more students are attacked do the police realise that the brothers are innocent, and that there is something terrible lurking around the college campus ... something that threatens to transform Susan into the most horrific creature known to Navajo myth. And there is only one man who can save her, a man who can see the oncoming danger - Jim Rook.

It is now left to Jim and his engaging class of slow-lane students to face a shattering confrontation between the cultures of new and ancient America.


Editorial Reviews

From Kirkus Reviews

In Masterson's second Jim Rook series installment (Rook, p. 246), Catherine White Bird, the daughter of a Navajo, is able to turn at will into a huge, raging creature whose 12-inch claw- spread can tear holes in steel when not ripping out human hearts. A bout of pneumonia in childhood left Jim Rook equipped, like it or not, with psychic insight. Today, as a teacher at a community college in California, he runs a remedial class for slow learners, whom be brings up to speed by exposing them to modern poetry (Whitman, Ginsberg, Edna St. Vincent Millay, and others)--a terrific hit, as it turns out. But poetry is not all balm, either. It just so happens that one of his students, the lovely Catherine, was promised in marriage at age 12 to the demonic and detestable Dog Brother, who can call forth the terrible spirit known among the Navajo as Coyote. Catherine, now 15, has a boyfriend, Brad, who is suddenly found clawed to pieces. At the same time, the locker room for the school's football team is savaged, its lockers bent and ripped by giant claws, the team's uniforms shredded and helmets burst. Rook's apartment and all the contents are similarly shredded--and his cat murdered. Catherine's brothers, Paul and Grey Cloud, have a heavy-handed way of protecting their sister, which angers Rook. But he's informed by Catherine's father, Henry Black Eagle, that if he really wants to appease Dog Brother--and save Catherine- -then Rook must take his girlfriend Susan, two students, and Catherine and pay a visit to Dog Brother on the Navajo reservation. When Rook does so, though, he finds that the students and Susan are actually intended as sacrifices to Coyote. He also discovers that Catherine herself, not Dog Brother or Coyote, is Changing Bear Maiden, the raging black beast. . . . Styleless but straightforward, very nearly a YA novel. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

About the Author

Graham Masterton's first novel, T"he Manitou," was a bestseller and an instant classic and was made into a feature film. Masterton has won an Edgar Award and France's prestigious Prix Julia Verglanger. Several of his stories have been adapted for television.
Masterton's more than one hundred novels include "Charnel House, The Chosen Child," and "Maiden Voyage" (a" New York Times" bestseller). He has written for adults, young adults, and children and edited several anthologies. Earlier in his career, Masterton edited men's magazines, including "Penthouse," He has written a number nonfiction books on sex, including "How to Drive Your Man Wild in Bed," which has sold more than three million copies.
Masterton and his wife, Wiescka, live in Ireland.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 256 pages
  • Publisher: Severn House Publishers (August 1, 1997)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0727851888
  • ISBN-13: 978-0727851888
  • Product Dimensions: 8.8 x 5.7 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 14.9 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (3 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #3,525,228 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

 

Customer Reviews

3 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (3 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Great, awesome read. Only from the master of Horror!, April 16, 2004
By 
Amer Mattar (Aloha, or United States) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: Tooth and Claw (Rook) (Bk. 2) (Hardcover)
I was weary of the idea of a storyline that someone can see ghosts, and no one else can as it is too common and gets old fast. Not when Masterton does it. He takes it up six or more levels to something worth reading and entertaining. This is the first of his ROOK series that I have read and i thought it was magnificant. Other than having to bear with the misspellings of some words, it was worthwhile. You cannot put down this book without feeling terrible. I guarantee that you will NOT be disappointed with this book. You should try his other books. I have read all his horror books but one: ROOK. I am trying to find it to buy but no one but Amazon has it ($35.00) a little steep for me right now. Anyhow, I recommend all his books.
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3.0 out of 5 stars Minor Masterton but still a cut above the competition, February 7, 2008
This review is from: Tooth and Claw (Rook) (Bk. 2) (Hardcover)
This is the second title in the Jim Rook series and it helps to have read the first title but this is not strictly necessary.
Rook is a much loved Special Needs teacher in an LA high school and has a gift he does not always appreciate -the ability to see spirits and communicate with the dead.On a more prosaic -and more important -level he is also an excellent teacher who has the regard and respect of his students ,if not that of his uptight Dean who is more concerned with the image of the school than its student's eeducational advancement and is no friend of the Special Needs programme .
The stories often engage with minority cultures -the Esquimaux in "Snowman" ,Black Americans in "Rook",the opening title .Here it is Native American ,specifically Navajo culture .Catherine White Bird is a Navajo student of exceptional beauty in Rook's class who incurs the wrath of her tradtionally minded brothers by dating hotshot football player Martin Amato.Shorly before a big game the locker rooms are trashed by an entity of exceptional power and soon after Amato is found dead on Venice Beach ,almost literally torn apart.The brothers are arrested but Rook is also targeteed ;the same entity trashes his apartment and he is warned by the shades of both a deceased neighbour and his late grandfather that his own life is under threat.
The key lies in another Navajo ,Dog Brother,who angered at a threat by Catherine to break off their engagement has summoned a hideous demon to kill all who jeopardise the impending nuptials .The result is carnage both in the Arizona desert and in LA itself and major character dies as a result
This works pretty well till we get to the climax at a high school football game where Masterton quite simply gets it wrong and the mood topples over into laughter at a misjudged ending rather than suspense .

The book is minor Masterton ,aimed mainly at teen audiences in the States ,and in evoking Native American themes invites comaprison with the Manitou amd Burial ,both weightier and better books.It is perfectly redable and genre lovers are likey to enjoy the book a lot
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3.0 out of 5 stars Entertaining, although not what it could have been., January 29, 2003
By 
"ab1aze" (Brisbane, Queensland Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Tooth and Claw (Rook) (Bk. 2) (Hardcover)
The 2nd book in the Jim Rook series is certainly an improvement on the first, but still fails to live up to Masterton's earlier work. The writing style is crisp, if overly simple and some ideas are great, but the characters aren't fleshed out as much as one would hope. The final scene which features a body part being used as a football was very quirky and is worth the price of admission. The Native American mythology added some more intrigue to the tale. If you read the first and liked it, this is a fun continuation of the story. The ending will leave you wanting to read the 3rd in the series, which I certainly plan to do! I just hope they keep getting better.
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