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The Ghosts of Sleath by James Herbert
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The Ghosts of Sleath

by James Herbert

Series: David Ash (2)

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174134,672 (3.37)5
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Ghosts of Sleath is not really a sequel, but is a follow up to this author's book Haunted, which was made into a film by the same name (but I will go into all that in Haunted). Anyway, it has the same main character, who works for some institute that studies paranormal occurrences. He's kind of like Jessica Fletcher...you know, wherever he goes, somebody gets killed. This is a story of a haunting, not only of a person or a house, but of an entire village. The key is not until the very end, keeping things moving right along and not giving away the farm until the end. Scares the pants off of you! ( )
  bcquinnsmom | May 10, 2006 |
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Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0006475973, Paperback)

Veteran horror writer James Herbert brings back the protagonist of Haunted to investigate psychic disturbances in a picturesque village in the Lake District of England. It's an interesting mishmash of a novel--not entirely successful, but enjoyable all the same. Herbert's penchant for gorgeously visceral carnage unfortunately clashes with his equally skilled ability to create a subtle mood of supernatural terror. And he throws way too many ingredients into the stew: family secrets, rape, infanticide, necrophilia, the "Black Arts," a moldering mansion, a sinister yellow fog, drowning children, poltergeist pranks, a haunted painting, a tormented vicar, a neglectful doctor, even an evil knight. Yet, as Necrofile: The Review of Horror Fiction reports, "None of these flaws are fatal. These days, making a classic ghost story work at all--let alone on the scale of The Ghosts of Sleath--requires a daunting level of craft, control, and consistency.... Many of the novel's supernatural elements ... evoke the requisite chills."

(retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 20:14:51 -0500)

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