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In a country village, a family of New Yorkers encounters a chilling ancient rite After watching his asthmatic daughter suffer in the foul city air, Theodore Constantine decides to get back to the land. When he and his wife search New England for the perfect nineteenth-century home, they find no township more charming, no countryside more idyllic than the farming village of Cornwall Coombe. Here they begin a new life: simple, pure, close to nature-and ultimately more terrifying than show more Manhattan's darkest alley. When the Constantines win the friendship of the town matriarch, the mysterious Widow Fortune, they are invited to join the ancient festival of Harvest Home, a ceremony whose quaintness disguises dark intentions. In this bucolic hamlet, where bootleggers work by moonlight and all of the villagers seem to share the same last name, the past is more present than outsiders can fathom-and something far more sinister than the annual harvest is about to rise out of the earth. show less

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jseger9000 Another horror story about strangers moving to an isolated town that practices old traditions.
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sparemethecensor House of Echoes is a more modern, less misogynist Harvest Home.

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40 reviews
Please note that I gave this book 4.5 stars and rounded it up to 5 stars on Goodreads.

I read this for Halloween Bingo 2016 and for September's group read for the Horror Aficionados on Goodreads as well as for the Fall Fear Challenge.

Taking place in the early 1970s, a couple (Ned and Beth Constantine) and their young daughter (Kate) move to the small village of Cornwall Coombe in New England.

Told in the first person by Ned, we have him at first charmed and then dismayed by the village of Cornwall Coombe. Ned starts to ask questions about people who have come before, what in the world happened to a young girl that made her kill herself, and why is Harvest Home (a celebration that occurs) so essential to the village.

Ned is an aspiring show more painter, and his artistic bent is seen as setting him apart and a little above from the village full of farmers and farmers wives. However, after a while, Ned is seen as being a busy body who wants to meddle in things best left alone.

I did love the character of Ned, though after a while even I was like, dude, come on, stop. He kept pushing and pushing and digging into things because in his mind, even though he was a new comer, he saw the village and inhabitants as backwards except for a few friends he made (the Widow, his next door neighbors, and a young man who helps him out around his new home) and I think in his mind, if he could pry the mystery off of the village, then things would be better. That he could make the village more align with what he wanted for it. Ned gets spooked early on in the book by a young girl that the village claims can see into the future and from then on he seems to be running from a fate that he ends up bringing about.

What made me laugh, and ultimately what made the ending so satisfying, is that Ned really didn't think things through. He seemed to think that people didn't know what was going on and why. And though he was a man and was used to being in charge and decisive, it made him uncomfortable to see his wife and daughter growing apart from him, and women being in charge of this village.

I was fascinated by so many characters, and could have read about this village for hours. To see how Tyron tied a village in America, back to England, and even then back to something else I thought was pretty smart.

The writing was top notch throughout. The main reason why I didn't give this five stars though is that the book starts off slow (I mean really slow) and it takes a good long while before things start going. I think most readers would not even see this as a horror book at first because you start to feel after a while you are just reading about the day to day happenings in a small New England village and that's for a good 80 percent of the book before things take a turn.

The setting of Cornwall Coombe was perfectly done. I like how Tyron showed a town that was content to stay in the past and not change and how he throughout the story showed that change was going to come one way or another (he brings up a nearby commune, more and more young people wanting to move to New York and get away, one of the younger people in the village buying a tractor) to the village, and now my mind wonders about this fictional town and did it survive after the conclusion to the story. Could they go on with what they were doing or would they eventually have to move on from the old ways.

The ending answered so many questions and you know realize why one man in the town was reluctant to do much to help Ned. It would have been great to read a sequel and see how the town had gone on 7 years from the ending of this novel.

I can definitely see why it is a horror classic, and I really did enjoy this one a lot.
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An artist moves his family to a small Connecticut town, where he discovers horrific secrets behind the quaint harvest rituals.

Granted, Harvest Home is a schlocky horror novel published in the 1970s. However, the fear of women expressed in the novel, and the resulting hatred of them, is so palpable that reading it felt icky. I wanted to wash my hands each time I turned the page. The story presents women as unfathomable to men, and ultimately violent toward and oppressive of them. Women are linked to an ancient mother Earth force that imbues them with the power to do whatever they want, despite the objections of some of the male characters. One of the "horrors" of the story is when the male protagonist loses control over his wife and show more daughter, and they begin acting independently to fulfill their needs and desires. In this book, women are the “other,” portrayed as essentially different and opposed to men, wrong where men are right. This worldview just doesn't do it for me. Women are neither mysterious and unknowable goddesses, nor are they automatons only meant for sex, reproduction and raising children. Furthermore, the "twists" are completely predictable. This book was a disappointing follow-up to The Other. show less
A good tale well told. Nothing profound just good clean fun in old school King/McCammon mystery thriller horror style. Everyone is in on the joke except the narrator kind of thing. The ending is telegraphed early on so there are really no surprises but it becomes a page turner nonetheless.

Tryon throws us one red herring in the Soakes but you see through it pretty early and then half way through he just hands it to you.

The key to a novel like this is characterization. We need to invest in certain characters for the payoff to stick. We need to care. Tryon does this well here.

It isn't really necessary to invoke the supernatural for this to work but clearly Tryon wants us to believe in at least Missy's clairvoyance. On no other level does show more it really require any stretching of belief. The harvest's rise and fall could just be coincidence. People have actually believed this rubbish for centuries.

The murders and rapes aside, is the Mother Earth worship any more silly than other fictions we fool ourselves into believing will make the universe make sense?
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I watched this film 45 years ago and it terrified me. For nearly 50 years it has stuck with me and planted dark slithering things in my mind. I was only five years old and worked the fields with my family and that association with those evil people has never left. The book is an incredibly well measured and put together story. A slow...very slow build up of something that you know is going to come not out of the dark, but out of the very souls of those surrounding you. I do not want to give away the plot by any means, but if someone tells you to mind your own business...guess what? DO IT. The characters are real and well written, The main character Ned, really seems like a good guy but he has not he common sense to just shut his mouth. show more The story will draw you in and the inhabitants of the village will make sure you stay there. show less
Perfect Halloween season book. It was descriptive, gripping and a slowwww burn to the finish line. I kept wondering when it would pick up... but then suddenly it did and there was no chance of me stopping halfway thru the book!
I loved the characters, especially Widow Fortune.
Hearing about her natural remedies made me chuckle as she reminds me a lot of myself, the modern day naturalist attempting to rewild herself with herbs and shrooms.
Excellent read and will be remembered fondly!
What a horrifying story! What a great book!

This is the story of what awaits Ned Constantine, his wife Beth, and his daughter Kate after they leave urban life behind and move to the rural Connecticut town of Cornwall Coombe. Its population of individuals, most notably the herbalist Widow Fortune and the postal worker Tamar Penrose, carry out their ancient harvest traditions and festivals, having as their crescendo the rite of Harvest Home, an ancient secret ceremony celebrating the corn harvest and ritually symbolizing earthly renewal.

The characters of this story are positively creepy. It turns out that you can't tell the good guys from the bad guys (or gals). I really liked the main character Ned who was an artist. He, at first, saw show more the beauty of Cornwall Coombe and tried to capture it in his paintings. His intention was to make a better life for his family. Unfortunately, he didn't realize his mistake until too late.

If you love taut writing, unpredictable characters, small town settings, and unsettling scenes, you'll appreciate this book. if you have a queasy stomache for grizzly scenes, it might be better to just pass this book along to someone else who finds horror novels entertaining.
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½
Incredible book. A very very slow burn. probably too slow for many. But once you settle in and let the richness of the atmosphere sweep over you, the hook catches deeply. With so much time spent languidly lolling in the warm summer evenings of Cornwall Coombe, you almost forget that you're reading a horror novel at all.

But when the breeze blows and leaves rattle with the casual advancement of the seasons, reminders begin to crop up here and there. First a tingle at the back of the neck. Then a barely-suppressed shiver. Then a sinking pit of doomed foreboding in deepest recesses of your gut.

And when at long last you remember or, as it may be, fully realize exactly what it is you're reading...it's too late to turn back or put the novel show more down. Chilling, terrifying, creepy, and bleak as hell, this is one book in recent memory that actually gave me a fright. And I read an awful lot of horror without feeling anything more than a periodic twitch. show less

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similar to Children of the Corn in Name that Book (January 2012)

Author Information

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Author
16+ Works 4,205 Members

Awards and Honors

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Harvest Home
Original publication date
1973
People/Characters
Ned Constantine; Beth Constantine; Kate Constantine; Widow Fortune; Missy Penrose; Jack Stump (show all 21); Old Man Soakes; Justin Hooke; Sophie Hooke; Worthy Pettinger; Grace Everdeen; Tamar Penrose; Robert Dodd; Maggie Dodd; Amys Penrose; Jim Buxley; Roger Penrose; Ewan Deming; Irene Tatum; Jim Minerva; Fred Minerva
Important places
Cornwall Coombe, Connecticut, USA; Connecticut, USA
Important events
Harvest Home
Related movies
"The Dark Secret of Harvest Home" (1978 | IMDb | TV mini-series)
Epigraph
In Harvest-time, harvest folk
servants and all,
Should make all together
good cheer in the hall,
And fill the black bowl
Of blyth to their song,
And let them be merry,
all harvest-time... (show all) long.

Thomas Tusser, Elizabethan farmer-poet
Dedication
This book is for Allen Leffingwell Vincent
First words
I awakened that morning to birdsong.
Quotations
Love the earth and it must love you back.
Thinking back from this day to that one nine months ago, I now imagine that bird to have been sounding a warning.
She pointed upward. "See that blue sky now, that's God's sky. And up there in that vasty blue is God. But see how far away He is. See how far the sky. And look here, at the earth, see how close, how abiding and faithful it is... (show all). See this little valley of ours, see the bountiful harvest we're to have. God's fine, but it's old Mother Earth that's the friend to man."
Harvest Home's when the last of the corn comes in, when the harvestin's done and folks can relax and count their blessin's. A time o' joy and celebration.
"A woman always thinks it takes two to keep a secret, but I'm here to say I think it takes one."
"Life at its worst is better than no life at all, en't that so?"
A man's good as he ought to be  but a woman's bad as she dares.
We fear only one thing, that something should interfere or change the cycle.
The Bible says Eve was born of Adam's rib, but he was born of the earth, so there was woman before there ever was man. She is not merely a mate, a life's companion, a helpmeet; she is the moving force, the power.
Last words
(Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)The Invisible Voice continued.
Original language
English
Canonical DDC/MDS
813.087386

Classifications

Genres
Horror, Fiction and Literature, General Fiction
DDC/MDS
813.087386Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in EnglishBy typeGenre fictionAdventure fictionHorror fiction; Ghost fictionHorror fictionFolk horror
LCC
PZ4 .T8764Language and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction in English
BISAC

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Popularity
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Reviews
40
Rating
½ (3.64)
Languages
English, French, German, Italian
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
20
ASINs
17