Enjoy fast, FREE delivery, exclusive deals and award-winning movies & TV shows with Prime
Try Prime
and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery
Amazon Prime includes:
Fast, FREE Delivery is available to Prime members. To join, select "Try Amazon Prime and start saving today with Fast, FREE Delivery" below the Add to Cart button.
Amazon Prime members enjoy:- Cardmembers earn 5% Back at Amazon.com with a Prime Credit Card.
- Unlimited Free Two-Day Delivery
- Instant streaming of thousands of movies and TV episodes with Prime Video
- A Kindle book to borrow for free each month - with no due dates
- Listen to over 2 million songs and hundreds of playlists
- Unlimited photo storage with anywhere access
Important: Your credit card will NOT be charged when you start your free trial or if you cancel during the trial period. If you're happy with Amazon Prime, do nothing. At the end of the free trial, your membership will automatically upgrade to a monthly membership.
Buy new:
$10.17$10.17
FREE delivery: Wednesday, Oct 18 on orders over $35.00 shipped by Amazon.
Ships from: Amazon.com Sold by: Amazon.com
Buy used: $6.17
Download the free Kindle app and start reading Kindle books instantly on your smartphone, tablet, or computer - no Kindle device required.
Read instantly on your browser with Kindle for Web.
Using your mobile phone camera - scan the code below and download the Kindle app.
Off Season Paperback – October 20, 2013
| Price | New from | Used from |
|
Audible Audiobook, Unabridged
"Please retry" |
$5.95
| $7.95 with discounted Audible membership | |
|
Mass Market Paperback
"Please retry" | — | $4.26 |
|
Audio CD, Audiobook, CD, Unabridged
"Please retry" | $15.00 | — |
- Kindle
$0.00 Read with Kindle Unlimited to also enjoy access to over 4 million more titles $3.99 to buy -
Audiobook
$5.95 $5.95 with discounted Audible membership - Hardcover
from $33.716 Used from $34.48 14 New from $33.71 - Paperback
$10.1712 Used from $6.17 7 New from $10.17 - Mass Market Paperback
$16.9910 Used from $4.26 1 Collectible from $19.71 - Audio CD
$15.007 New from $15.00
Purchase options and add-ons
September. A beautiful New York editor retreats to a lonely cabin on a hill in the quiet Maine beach town of Dead River―off season―awaiting her sister and friends. Nearby, a savage human family with a taste for flesh lurks in the darkening woods, watching, waiting for the moon to rise and night to fall…
And before too many hours pass, five civilized, sophisticated people and one tired old country sheriff will learn just how primitive we all are beneath the surface…and that there are no limits at all to the will to survive.
This novel contains graphic content and is recommended for regular readers of horror novels.
- Print length324 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- Publication dateOctober 20, 2013
- Dimensions5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- ISBN-101477840524
- ISBN-13978-1477840528
Books with Buzz
Discover the latest buzz-worthy books, from mysteries and romance to humor and nonfiction. Explore more
Frequently bought together

Similar items that may ship from close to you
“Most things are worth doing,” said Carla, “if you feel like doing them. Staying alive is worth doing. And you don’t stay alive by doing nothing.”Highlighted by 83 Kindle readers
Like the houses, like the trees, the people out here looked stunted, almost stillborn, as if centuries of social immobility had thinned their seed, bled them dry.Highlighted by 69 Kindle readers
Editorial Reviews
About the Author
Jack Ketchum is the pseudonym for a former actor, singer, teacher, literary agent, lumber salesman, and soda jerk. He is also a former flower child and baby boomer who figures that in 1956 Elvis, dinosaurs, and horror probably saved his life. His first novel, Off Season, prompted the Village Voice to publicly scold its publisher in print for publishing violent pornography. He personally disagrees but is perfectly happy to let you decide for yourself. His short story The Box won a 1994 Bram Stoker Award from the HWA. He has written many novels, including The Girl Next Door, Off Season, and Stranglehold. His stories are collected in The Exit at Toledo Blade Boulevard and Broken on the Wheel of Sex.
Product details
- Publisher : 47North; Reprint edition (October 20, 2013)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 324 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1477840524
- ISBN-13 : 978-1477840528
- Item Weight : 15.2 ounces
- Dimensions : 5.5 x 1 x 8.25 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #17,578 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #297 in Psychological Fiction (Books)
- #420 in Murder Thrillers
- #685 in Psychological Thrillers (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
Important information
To report an issue with this product, click here.
About the author

Jack Ketchum "is on a par with Clive Barker (Hellraiser), James Ellroy (L.A. Confidential) and Thomas Harris (The Silence of The Lambs)," and that "the only novelist working today that is writing more important fiction is Cormack McCarthy (No Country for Old Men, The Road). - Stephen King
Jack Ketchum is the pseudonym for novelist Dallas Mayr. He was born in Livingston, New Jersey in 1946. A onetime actor, teacher, and lumber salesman, Ketchum credits his childhood love of Elvis Presley, dinosaurs, and horror for getting him through his formative years. As a teenager, was befriended by Robert Bloch, author of "Psycho" who became a mentor to him. He supported Ketchum's work just as his work was supported by his own mentor, H.P. Lovecraft. This relationship with Bloch lasted until his death in 1994.
A pivotal point in Jack Ketchum's career came while he was working for the Scott Meredith Literary Agency. He met Henry Miller and assisted him as his agent until shortly before his death in 1980. His extraordinary encounter with Miller at his home in Pacific Palisades is one of the subjects of his memoir in "Book of Souls".
In 1980, Jack Ketchum published his first novel "Off Season". Stephen King said in his acceptance speech at the 2003 National Book Awards that "Off Season set off a furor in my supposed field, that of horror, that was unequaled until the advent of Clive Barker. It is not too much to say that these two gentlemen remade the face of American popular fiction." Ketchum has received continued praise by King throughout their friendship.
Ketchum's work is largely based upon true events. The Girl Next Door , for example, was inspired by the 1965 murder of the young Sylvia Likens. In the special edition of the novel, King, who volunteered to write the preface, wrote one of the longest introductions of his career. He later went on to say that the movie adaptation of the book was "the first authentically shocking American film I've seen since Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer over 20 years ago. If you are easily disturbed, you should not watch this movie. If, on the other hand, you are prepared for a long look into hell, suburban style, The Girl Next Door will not disappoint. This is the dark-side-of-the-moon version of Stand By Me."
He has received numerous Bram Stoker Awards for works such as "The Box", "Closing Time", and "Peaceable Kingdom". As his books gained in worldwide popularity, they also began to be adapted into feature films, the first of which was "Jack Ketchum's The Lost" which went on to be a cult success, followed by the highly controversial second film "The Girl Next Door". However, the main launch for Jack Ketchum into international commercial and critical success was the long-awaited release by Magnolia Pictures of the film Red, based on his novel, starring Brian Cox (The Bourne Supremacy) and Tom Sizemore (Saving Private Ryan). After favorable reviews at The Sundance Film Festival, the movie made a critical showing in the United States and enjoyed relative success internationally with subsequent translations of the novel.
The author enjoyed more international succes with the publication and film version of "The Woman" co-written and directed by Lucky McKee in which the New York Times said "in this lean adaptation of a novel by Jack Ketchum and himself, maintains an artfully calibrated pace, investing a powerful parable with an abundance of closely observed details. Like David Cronenberg and Roman Polanski, Mr. McKee is a master at drawing suspense from pregnant silences."
Jack Ketchum continues his rise with the present showing of "The Woman" at the Sundance Film Festival 2011 co-written by Ketchum with director Lucky McKee. The novel is to be released this year.
Kethcum lives in New York City where he continues to write, articles, reviews, short stories, novels and screenplays. For more information go to international website: www.thejackketchum.com.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
Learn more how customers reviews work on Amazon-
Top reviews
Top reviews from the United States
There was a problem filtering reviews right now. Please try again later.
The one way I can describe this book is if the movie series Wrong Turn put out another installment that takes place on the coast of Maine. This is early 1980s horror, my favorite decade! It’s certainly not for the squeamish!
The story focuses on Carla, a young editor from the big city who has rented a remote cabin in Maine for a month of relaxation and work on her latest project. When she invites sister Marjie and four of their friends to join her for a week in the woods, she has no idea it will be the start of a nightmare for all of them. Within hours of the guests' arrival, the six friends are attacked by human monsters intent on murder . . . and worse.
Some reviewers here have described OFF SEASON as a novel that lacks characterization, while others have complained about the slow start to the violence. Neither assessment has merit. Ketchum does an excellent job differentiating his characters: Carla is self-assured and confident, younger sister Marjie has always seen herself as weak and suffers from depression, Nick loves both of them but is trying to put the past behind him, and police chief Peters is middle-aged and tired but determined to do the right thing. These are identifiable characters that are likable and easy to root for. Carla's other three guests (her current boyfriend Jim, Marjie's boyfriend Dan, and Nick's new girlfriend Laura) are less fleshed out, but Ketchum is able get his readers to understand all three in very short order.
As for the slow start to the violence, the only readers who will complain about that are those who are only picking this up for the gore-fest. It's true that the first 130 pages are a set-up for what's to come, but that set-up is full of foreboding, hints of brutality, and glimpses of depravity. Ketchum shifts perspective from Carla to her sister and friends to Peters to members of the cannibalistic family, and in so doing he is able to build suspense over those first 130 pages, so that when the attack actually occurs it's impossible not to be blown away. The "slow start" is the roller coaster's creaky rise up to the first big drop, and the rest of the book is pure free-fall.
Just how gross is this book? It's pretty gross. Ketchum's villains are cannibals, after all, and they really love the hunt . . . and the kill and the butchering and the cooking. There's enough blood and gore for any shock-horror fan. At the same time, what makes this novel worth reading is Ketchum's portrayal of these fiends as human - as horrible as they are, they are not monsters. And as Marjie and the others are sucked deeper and deeper into depravity, Ketchum forces us to see how far they themselves will go to survive. This is not an easy book to read, and it's not an easy book to forget.
The original version of OFF SEASON, published in 1981, was edited to remove things the publisher felt were too over-the-top for mainstream readers. The paperback edition released in 2006 (as well as the pricier hardcover edition) restores the uncut version of the manuscript. Does it make a huge difference? I read the original version in 1981, and the only thing that stood out to me as obviously different in this new version is the ending and the fate of one particular character - this change is important, and it makes a big difference in terms of the overall message of the novel. The other changes involve the inclusion of some additional bits of grotesque description during the many scenes of brutality. I can't say I would have noticed most of the changes without Ketchum's afterward - well, one particularly horrific moment with a fish hook did stand out!
Overall, if you're a horror fan, this is a novel that is definitely worth reading. It's more than just a collection of gross-out moments, though, so if it's just the gore you're looking for, OFF SEASON might disappoint (the sequel, OFFSPRING, actually has more non-stop violence than OFF SEASON, although it is less successful). Horror fans who appreciate well-written prose with a challenging message will enjoy this. It remains one of my favorites.
Until now.
Considered part of his "Dead River" trilogy (the other two novels being The Offspring and The Woman), this is the book which launched his career. I feel it also kicked started the whole "splatterpunk" horror phenomena which ran amok in the late 80's to early 90's. Crazed cannibal movies for the drive-in movie circuit have been around every since Jack Hill unleashed Spider Baby in 1964. But this was the first time a novel had taken the gore level to 11.
Off-season is loosely based on the legend of Sawney Bean, a 16th century legend about a clan of murders and thieves who hid-out in the caves of Scotland near Galloway. The clan also had a tendency to dine on their victims, which made for a lot of chapbooks. Unfortunately, there is little evidence to suggest they ever existed. The tales told about them still made for chilling tales along the northumberland border country.
In Ketchum's novel, the crazed cannibals are the survivors of a family who were in charge of a lighthouse off the coast of Maine. When a hurricane struck in the 19th century, one of the daughters ran off from the family, insane from lack of food. She managed to survive long enough to kidnap a child of the next family. Soon, an entire tribe of these creatures had populated the island in secret. Until "men with guns" forced them onto the mainland, where the hunting was much better.
The novel begins with a woman being chased by the cannibal children. She's made the mistake of stopping to check on an innocent girl who was crying by the road. The feral kids chase her over a cliff and into the sea.
At the same time, a group of innocent 30something New Yorkers are about to arrive at a cabin in the Maine woods, near the town of Dead River. What they don't know is the location of the cannibal tribe's hidden cave, in close proximity to the cabin. The tribe soon becomes aware of the latest opportunity and heads out on a raid.
Parrell to the action is a sheriff named Peters who's about to retire. Dead River doesn't see much activity except in tourist season. His biggest problem are Gothamites who can't understand why the plumber won't show up when summoned. But when the woman who went over the cliff at the beginning is fished out of the ocean, he starts to add isolated incidents up. She swears it was a pack of kids who chased her. The sheriff remembers a drunk rambling about a group of kids beating a dog to death down by the ocean. And there have been more disappearances around town than the population would warrant.
When the cannibals do attack the cabin, it's quick and viscous. But one man has had military training. Plus there's a pistol floating around..somewhere. The gore flies fast, but Ketchum has done all he could do to make us feel sympathy for the victims. The original book had plenty of the violence toned-down by the publisher. The unabridged version restores it.
The cannibal tribe is the reverse of all the "noble savage" stories so many of us read as kids. Imagine Tarzan butchering Jane's family and you will have some idea of the brutality of this book. It's not a novel to be read if you dislike violence in your fiction. The tribe is viscous beyond description, but Ketchum has done a little research and tried to imagine how such a group might survive. They don't even have names; the clan leader is simply refereed to as "The Man".
The ending is nihilistic. Ketchum was trying to make a point about the random senselessness of the universe, but his publishers made him put a positive spin on a few characters. The unabridged version removes the positive.
An important horror novel, but not the sort of thing to read for brightening your day.
[...]
Top reviews from other countries
Absolutely brutal from start to finish with very little reprieve in between, I was gobsmacked by the sheer level of brutality on display. The amount of suffering in this book is just beyond what most writers can effectively describe. Ketchums disdain for his characters' will to survive is eye-opening. I can't wait to dive into Off Spring! Just need a few days to shake the last gory fibers of my torturous nightmare. Fun times!
BUT, and this is a big "but"... the book (to me) was boring. Slasher horror usually works (again, for me) in two cases: either it's pure campy fun, and you want to see in which creative way the bland and annoying characters get killed... or the protagonists are well-written, so you worry and root for them, and the story becomes true horror.
This book is neither. It takes itself very seriously, like a true suspence/horror novel, but the main characters are just so boring, I never grew to care for them. I mean, there is -nothing- in them, no true conflict, no interesting thoughts, nothing. (I guess the only mildly engaging part was the study of the girl whose reaction to danger was freeze, but who had an incredible will to live.) At the same time, the serious tone never allowed me to have fun with the gory parts.
Everything with the cannibal family was great though.
I'd never read any Jack Ketchum before this, but I'd heard good things, and so, intrigued by 'The Sawney Bean Clan' style premise, and it's heavily censored publishing history, I thought I'd give this one a go first.
Pretty good. I quite enjoyed it overall. The first 60 pages are duller than a train~spotters memoirs, but after that, once it kicked off, just under halfway into the book, the action was fairly relentless..
Now don't get wrong, it's by no means the goriest/nastiest book I've ever read, and whether it deserved to be so heavily cut (or indeed it's reputation as being so gruesome) on it's release back in 1980, probably depends on how easily shocked you are, and your views around censorship in general, but overall you can kinda see why it might have upset a few mainstream readers at the time..
Featuring as it does, some nice juicy chapters that include: dismemberment, brain eating, child decapitation, point blank lobotomies, castration, mutilation, stone age torture, organ removal, cannibal cooking tips and sexual assault, etc!
Fear not though, because it's not so long before the civilised heroes begin to fight back and turn the tables (which was rather upsetting as I was growing quite fond of the cannibal family) and it eventually all comes to a head in a somewhat predictable (not that that spoils it) climactic bloodbath.
So there we have it folks, 'Off Season' is a straight up, genuine, early 80s, backwoods inbred slasher~horror. That has a good old humourless (There is a lot of humour, but it's macabre humour as opposed to irritating fanboy stuff), bloodthirsty vibe. And is an enjoyable fast paced (once it gets going) read, which I sat down and finished in one sitting.
Followed by Offspring and The Woman ~ which were both made into films. Which, if talking of films, if you like stuff like Wrong Turn or The Hills Have Eyes, this novel certainly comes recommended.
The Leisure Books version is the uncut, cheap mass market version I read.
4.25/5








