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Most Helpful Customer Reviews
15 of 15 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
"Lonliness and the feeling of being unwanted is ...terrible." Teresa Calcutta,
By
This review is from: The Unwanted (Mass Market Paperback)
Sixteen year old Cassie Winslow feels alone and unwanted after her mother dies in an automobile accident.
Her parents were divorced and her father remarried. Her father has Cassie come to live with him and his family in Cape Cod. When she arrives, she makes friends with her neighbor, Eric Cavanaugh who is the same age. However, most of the other students at the high school take the lead from Eric's old girlfriend, Lisa Chambers. As bullies, they shut her out and make hurtful comments about her so that Cassie doesn't know how she will fit in. Cassie is drawn to the one person in town who is also alone, the eccentric, Miranda. Miranda is considered odd and lives by herself in a home in the Marsh. When Cassie comes to Miranda's home and they talk, Miranda tells her that now, Cassie is hers and that she, Miranda, won't let anyone harm her. Besides being eccentric, Miranda has the power to communicate and control a cat and an albino hawk that live at her home. At her father's home, Cassie feels like an intruder and eventually comes to think of Miranda's house as her real home. As the days go by, Cassie and Eric bond together. Eric is also a friend of Miranda and when Eric is also mistreated by other students and his baseball coach, we observe strange, supernatural things happen to them. Is it witchcraft? Is it just a coincidence? John Saul does a standout job at keeping the reader guessing while at the same time providing a high level of suspense. The pacing is also well done with moments of high suspense followed by calmness, thus making the next moment of fear more intense. Toward the conclusion, the action is propelled faster and faster as possible supernatural forces follow Eric and Cassie. The author also provides some twists and surprises. I enjoyed the novel but felt that some of the action was predictable. Nevertheless, I felt entertained.
18 of 19 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
first rate horror read,
By orange (Philadelphia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: The Unwanted (Mass Market Paperback)
Being a fan of horror genre,Dean Koontz in particular,and looking to expand my horizons I picked up the Unwanted.At first,I thought this book to be rather similar to Dean Koontz style,but soon I was proven wrong.John Saul is a very solid writer in his own right,from the first pages he creates suspense that captures you and keeps you turning page after page.Some of the book was a bit predictable,but that made the twists in it so much more enjoyable.In the end I found it to be alltogether somewhat darker then Koontz writing,with somewhat ambiguous characters,neither good nor bad,but walking the gray territory in between.There were other differences,which I can't list at the risk of giving away some of the plot and overall I was very impressed.I will certainly be checking out more of John Saul's books and I highly recommend this book to any fan of the horror genre or just a good fast paced read.
10 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Another Good John Saul Book,
By A Customer
This review is from: The Unwanted (Mass Market Paperback)
For some reason, I always get this book mixed up with "Second Child," probably because of the similar plot lines--a young woman is orphaned and then taken in by her distant family in New England. Plus it's been several years since I've read this book (sometime during my high school or middle school years), which adds to the confusion.Anyway, the similarities between the two books are fairly obvious, in that the protagonist, 15-year-old Cassandra "Cassie" Winslow, loses her mother in a car crash in California and is consequently sent to live with her estranged father and his new family in False Harbor, Massachusetts, a setting that gives "The Unwanted" its somewhat Puritan/witch trial charm. It's here that a triangle of psychic power is reawakened between Cassie, Eric Cavanaugh (her 16-year-old neighbor), and Miranda Sikes (the local bag lady/witch who's been haunting her dreams lately). Soon Cassie becomes aware of powers she never knew she had--powers that are dangerous enough to kill. ("Carrie," anyone?) "The Unwanted" is certainly a must-read if you're a Saul fan and/or enjoy supernatural horror. This is one of many good books by him.
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