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Jack Cady (1932–2004)

Author of The Off Season

39+ Works 488 Members 9 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Jack Cady was born in Ohio and raised in Indiana and Kentucky. He has worked a wide variety of jobs throughout the country, including stints as a tree high climber, an auctioneer, a long truck driver, and has spent time in the Coast Guard. He has held teaching positions at the University of show more Washington, Clarion College, Knox College, the University of Alaska at Sitka, and Pacific Lutheran University show less

Includes the name: Pat Franklin

Works by Jack Cady

The Off Season (1995) 64 copies, 1 review
The Well (1981) 56 copies, 2 reviews
The Jonah Watch (1981) 37 copies, 2 reviews
Ghosts of Yesterday (2002) 33 copies
The Hauntings of Hood Canal (2001) 29 copies, 1 review
Street: A Novel (1994) 28 copies
Inagehi (1994) 28 copies
Rules of '48 (2008) 25 copies, 2 reviews
Embrace of the Wolf (1993) 11 copies
Singleton : a novel (1981) 11 copies

Associated Works

Prime Evil: New Stories by the Masters of Modern Horror (1988) — Contributor — 681 copies, 8 reviews
The Year's Best Science Fiction: Eleventh Annual Collection (1994) — Contributor — 467 copies, 2 reviews
October Dreams: A Celebration of Halloween (2000) — Contributor — 280 copies, 10 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Fourteenth Annual Collection (2001) — Contributor — 257 copies, 2 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy & Horror 2006: 19th Annual Collection (2006) — Contributor — 244 copies, 4 reviews
The Year's Best Fantasy and Horror: Sixth Annual Collection (1993) — Contributor — 219 copies, 1 review
The Dark (2003) — Contributor — 212 copies, 4 reviews
The Horror Hall of Fame: The Stoker Winners (2012) — Contributor — 47 copies, 3 reviews
Horror: The Best of the Year, 2006 Edition (2006) — Contributor — 46 copies, 1 review
Final Shadows (1991) — Contributor — 43 copies
Taverns of The Dead (2005) — Contributor — 42 copies, 2 reviews
Dixie Ghosts (1988) — Contributor — 40 copies, 1 review
Great American Ghost Stories (1991) — Contributor — 37 copies
Sea-Cursed: Thirty Terrifying Tales of the Deep (1994) — Contributor — 36 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1970 (1970) — Contributor — 26 copies, 1 review
The Best American Short Stories 1969 (1969) — Contributor — 25 copies
The UFO Files (1998) — Contributor — 23 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1971 (1971) — Contributor — 23 copies
The Best American Short Stories 1966 (1966) — Contributor — 19 copies
Western Ghosts (1990) — Contributor — 17 copies
Great American Ghost Stories: Volume 2 (1993) — Contributor — 13 copies, 1 review
The Best of Talebones (2010) — Contributor — 9 copies

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Reviews

22 reviews
When I was looking for more information about this book and Jack Cady, to make sure it'd be the kind of book I'd like to read, I kept seeing praise for his storytelling abilities. I'm not really sure what about the book caught my attention and made me interested, but there was something appealing about the back cover copy, and it's true - Jack Cady is a wonderful storyteller. It only took a few sentences to draw me into the story and hook me completely.

The book is about a neighborhood in show more Louisville, Kentucky, in August and September of 1948, when there was an eery string of deaths, all connected somehow. It's a portrait of the people who live and work there and even Jackson St. itself, painted against the backdrop of the local bar, the pawn shop, and the auction house. Really, the auction house is the heart of the action, with the pace of the plot segmented by the cycle of setting up and auction nights.

Looming over everything that happens in the book is history and the future, as certain knowledge of change that has happened and change that will come is reflected in each of the local and minor actions. The death of Charlie Weaver, the previous neighborhood auctioneer, at the beginning of the book echoes the deaths in the War only three years earlier. They are obvious marks of the slow, inexorable change that will happen, no matter what.

Cady tells the story of Jackson St, of Lucky the Jewish pawnbroker, of Lester the black auction grip, of Wade the formerly country-boy redneck auctioneer, of the boys Jim and Howard who represent the future, in a meandering fashion. While the book mostly follows the hot, tense days of August, the main story sometimes stops and gets set aside in order to reflect upon the War, or the nature of race in Kentucky in '48, or the way politics mattered to the folks on Jackson St, or religion, or the still-to-come Civil Rights era. But even so, it's still part of the portrait of Jackson St, and it all flows together to make that portrait more vibrant.

This is a book about that pause after World War 2, when everything in the American South was changing, yet it was also going along as best it could like before. I'm so glad I went with my impulse and picked it up at the library: I really enjoyed reading it, and I recommend it to anyone who thinks they might just like to read it, too.
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½
‘La guardia de Jonás: Una historia real de fantasmas contada en forma de novela’ es un libro marcado por la experiencia vital de su autor, Jack Cady. En su juventud, Jack Cady trabajó como guarda costero, y, como él mismo comenta, en su mente siempre se mantuvo la idea de plasmar sus vivencias en una novela, algo que tardó más de veinte años en lograr.

La historia, ambientada poco después de la Segunda Guerra Mundial, narra las experiencias de un grupo de marineros que sirven en la show more lancha Adrian, cuya misión consiste en rescatar todo tipo de barcos que se encuentren en problemas frente a las costas del estado de Maine. A lo largo de la narración, se nos van presentando los personajes de la novela, tanto su nombre y el cargo que desempeñan en el barco, como su carácter, con lo que logramos situarnos perfectamente como lectores además de sentirlos como personas reales. La novela describe a la perfección todo el ambiente marinero, así como las fuerzas de la naturaleza, el mar, las tormentas, el fuego, el hielo, peligros todos ellos a los que ha de hacer frente la tripulación sin importar el miedo que se pueda sentir. El elemento sobrenatural también está presente, en forma del fantasma de un antiguo miembro de la tripulación, aunque hay que remarcar que, siendo importante, no es el tema principal de la historia. Igualmente reseñable es el estado de ánimo de la tripulación ante la creencia de un Jonás a bordo, es decir, una persona que atrae la mala suerte, lo que provoca toda serie de problemas con el resto de compañeros.

Jack Cady logra con su prosa, de elaborado estilo, transportarnos a bordo de la Adrian, en una novela que no es fácil de leer, debido al vocabulario marinero (se echa de menos un apéndice, ya que las notas a pie de página se hacen insuficientes) y de una estructura en la que hay que estar muy atento. ‘La guardia de Jonás’ es sin duda una gran novela, que nos hace recordar a clásicos de otras épocas, como Melville, Conrad y Hodgson.
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Ever been caught up in a book so beautiful that even though you want to devour it to the very last page, you slow yourself down, savoring the moments, drawing it out? Waking up in the middle of the night to read a little more?

I forget how powerful Cady is. Even the preface was moving.

No one, in my experience, has written so True, so compleatly, so honestly, so movingly, so . . . perfectly of the extraordinariness of our ordinariness.

So freaking beautiful.

If you're expecting a post-WW2 show more story with the usual suspects, this isn't it. It isn't set in any of the usual types of locales either.

Louisville, Kentucky. Jackson Street. Bardstown Road.

The drama comes from the oldest stage, the human drama, the everyday in a pivotal time, when Joseph McCarthy was in full cry, Richard Nixon was becoming a recognizable name. When "communist" was spoken carelessly and ruthlessly with malleable and malevolent definition. When a fourteen year old boy (Jim) could decide that "communist" meant that he and his Black friend Howard could go to the park together — and if that's what a communist was that's what he was.

Each character's insights are unique to them, but we see the weaving of a collective consciousness, the one that eventually demanded the Civil Rights Act and the changes of the coming decades, parts of that consciousness the quiet, conscientious generation, watching, knowing that right is right; parts of it those who returned from the battle fronts where obsessions with skin color and racial superiority/inferiority became subsumed in the realities of red blood and weren't ready to resume their previous status back home; and the generation of flux, seeing the anomalies, the BS, asking questions, demanding answers — not the same old song and dance. The ones who decided that if being a communist meant they could go to the park with a Black friend then that was what they'd be.

And what was against them.

This is a story of the birth of change in an everyday world inhabited by people we know, or pass on the street, or that some of us might cross the street to avoid — and the true extraordinariness of it all. It is also the story of individual change and awakenings. Wade, Lucky, Jim, and the agents of change, Lester and Howard.

Plus, it's a damned good story, masterfully wrought.

If you're a writer, you will be a better writer for having read it.

If you're a thoughtful human being, you will be a better human being for having read it.
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*Partial spoilers ahead*

The Well, Jack Cady's debut, presents a problem for readers and reviewers alike. Firstly, despite the lurid illustrations on both the hardcover and paperback editions (and the tagline "If you do not believe in evil...you will not know when it takes you"), it's not a horror novel: it's a psychological drama with some of the superficial trappings of a horror novel. That's perfectly fine as long as you know what you're getting into, but a little irksome when you've been show more led to expect something else. Secondly, it's monotonous: there are, essentially, just two characters (one of whom abruptly disappears from the story without ever being fully developed, only to be dredged up again a page shy of the ending) and a single major setting. Finally, Cady too often sacrifices clarity to indulge in an oblique, circuitous style which seems to have no function apart from filling up space.

On the plus side, Cady's work is characterized by a seriousness of tone that one rarely encounters in popular fiction; he was writing about difficult, weighty matters and treated them with the proper gravity. The Well is a disjointed effort, but because Cady's approach was so severe and uncompromising (and also, perhaps, because I relate to the central character's need to confront his family's singularly dark history), I have a soft spot for it. Two and a half stars.
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Works
39
Also by
24
Members
488
Popularity
#50,612
Rating
3.8
Reviews
9
ISBNs
64
Languages
2
Favorited
1

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