Far Dark Fields

by Gary A. Braunbeck

Cedar Hill (5)

On This Page

Description

The lone survivor of a brutal massacre returns to Cedar Hill thirty-five years later only to find a series of missing children has the town in a panic. He also discovers that "Hoopsticks," the local mythical bogeyman, is all too real.

Tags

Recommendations

Member Reviews

2 reviews
Geoff Conover, who survived a massive killing spree when he was an infant, returns to Cedar Hill after thirty years to try and find out why the gunman (his brother) spared his life. He meets with a modern spree killer, and then a few locals at a tavern called the Hangman and learns some of the town's history (Braunbeck fans will geek-out over the references to many of his older Cedar Hill tales). A local reverend eventually explains the mysteries of Cedar Hill to Geoff, and takes him on a journey to find the answer he came looking for...a journey that takes them underneath an abandoned church to the lair of a legendary creature known as "Hoopsticks." Claustrophobics, beware!

FAR DARK FIELDS features everything Braunbeck fans have come to show more expect; a strange mystery, family tragedies, strange creatures, and (this time) musings on why we see the things we see (and the things we don't); and best of all, Braunbeck's writing is as breath-taking as ever. Despite the author's semi-familiar elements, FIELDS is a fresh, gripping read that unravels at a chilling, heart-breaking pace.

The ending--while satisfying--easily leaves room for another Cedar Hill novel, something I doubt I'd ever get tired of.
show less
This is the worst Cedar Hill and the worst Braunbeck book I have read so far, and I've been a big cheerleader in the past. There is virtually no plot in the 300 pages and reams of paper are wasted on backstory that anyone who has read the previous Braunbeck books would already know. On top of that there are just chapters of useless weirdness that don't point anywhere. There isn't even any payoff at the end, just some teasers about what's to come next. What is the next book going to be, the backstory of the previous book's backstory?

I wanted to like this book so much after all the other Cedar Hill books but this one just didn't do it.

If Braunbeck writes another Cedar Hill novel maybe the muse can put him back on track. Otherwise just show more write out a decent ending and let it go. show less

Members

Recently Added By

Talk Discussions

Past Discussions

Gary A. Braunbeck's 'Cedar Hills' books... in Thing(amabrarian)s That Go Bump in the Night (September 2009)

Author Information

Picture of author.
65+ Works 1,374 Members

Awards and Honors

Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
Far Dark Fields

Classifications

Genres
Fiction and Literature, Horror
DDC/MDS
813.54Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English1900-19991945-1999
LCC
PS3602 .R3885Language and LiteratureAmerican literature
BISAC

Statistics

Members
85
Popularity
375,260
Reviews
2
Rating
(3.79)
Languages
English
Media
Paper
ISBNs
1