Stranglehold
by Jack Ketchum
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Lydia McCloud meets Arthur Danse at a wedding party in Plymouth, N.H., and she thinks he's a man she could grow to love. Arthur sees things differently. In Lydia, he sees the sort of woman people always want to protect. He decides he's going to show her "she wouldn't always be protected." Once their only child, Robert, is born, Arthur's behavior worsens. When the courts become involved, the nightmare really begins. This scathing novel is an indictment of a justice system that makes a mockery show more of its very name. show lessTags
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Stranglehold is a gritty, visceral novel that is totally Jack Ketchum. Ketchum pulls no punches in his fiction. His writing is not for the feint of heart, and this novel certainly fits that bill. In this novel Lydia McCloud marries Arthur Danse, thinking he is the man of her dreams. Things are good with them for a time, and they have a child. But Arthur is the ultimate wolf in sheep’s clothing. As time goes by, she starts to see just what kind of monster he is when she suspects that he is molesting their son.
One of the really hard things to get right in fiction is the villain. It’s rare to find a good villain, and most of them are these one dimensional cartoon characters that don’t resemble real people. But Ketchum succeeds with show more Arthur Danse, who is one of the most utterly vile and despicable characters I have ever encountered in a novel, yet at the same time he’s well-developed and multi-dimensional. In Ketchum’s fiction, the humans are the monsters, and you don’t get more monstrous than Danse. I found myself rooting for his demise and hoping that it would come in a terrible way. To get the reader to care about a character, whether positively or negatively, is a job well done by the author, and I salute the late, great Jack Ketchum.
Carl Alves – author of The Invocation show less
One of the really hard things to get right in fiction is the villain. It’s rare to find a good villain, and most of them are these one dimensional cartoon characters that don’t resemble real people. But Ketchum succeeds with show more Arthur Danse, who is one of the most utterly vile and despicable characters I have ever encountered in a novel, yet at the same time he’s well-developed and multi-dimensional. In Ketchum’s fiction, the humans are the monsters, and you don’t get more monstrous than Danse. I found myself rooting for his demise and hoping that it would come in a terrible way. To get the reader to care about a character, whether positively or negatively, is a job well done by the author, and I salute the late, great Jack Ketchum.
Carl Alves – author of The Invocation show less
I wasn't quite sure what to expect from this book before I started it. Maybe I had an idea of the story at one point but realistically, it's a Jack Ketchum novel. That's all I need to know. This one was more rooted in the real world than some of his others but that's probably why I keep thinking about it again and again, days after I finished it.
The story is about Lydia and Arthur. We start with each when they are a child, gaining insight into each of their personalities. Then we continue and see them become a couple and get married. All pretty normal, until that point where it is not.
Now for the theme and it's impact on me. I suppose the theme is love. The shape that it takes. What people will do for it. How much or how little someone show more let's it into their life. And how best to analyze that but by contrasting it with pain and the loss of power. Which when you think about it is what makes up love. Giving someone else control of your heart and feelings. Trusting them until there is pain and that pain is too much; then trying to take back that control. All of those elements have been woven into this story. The result is a book that leaves a huge impact on the emotional side. I was able to predict / conclude why with some of the events in the story but that has more to do with the tragedies of the world today. It did not take away from the emotional pain. show less
The story is about Lydia and Arthur. We start with each when they are a child, gaining insight into each of their personalities. Then we continue and see them become a couple and get married. All pretty normal, until that point where it is not.
Now for the theme and it's impact on me. I suppose the theme is love. The shape that it takes. What people will do for it. How much or how little someone show more let's it into their life. And how best to analyze that but by contrasting it with pain and the loss of power. Which when you think about it is what makes up love. Giving someone else control of your heart and feelings. Trusting them until there is pain and that pain is too much; then trying to take back that control. All of those elements have been woven into this story. The result is a book that leaves a huge impact on the emotional side. I was able to predict / conclude why with some of the events in the story but that has more to do with the tragedies of the world today. It did not take away from the emotional pain. show less
Just terrific! Could not put the book down. The storyline is spellbinding...
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Common Knowledge
- Original title
- Stranglehold
- Original publication date
- 1995
- People/Characters
- Lydia Danse
- Epigraph*
- "... Zorn erzeugt, so oder so, eine Zukunft." - Russell Banks, das süße Jenseits
"Come back baby, come
Comeback baby, come
Come back baby, come
I wanna play house with you."
- Arthur Gunter - First words*
- Es reicht, dachte sie.
- Last words*
- (Click to show. Warning: May contain spoilers.)In der Dunkelheit seines Kinderzimmers war sie später immer zu ihm gegangen, hatte ihn an ihren Busen gedrückt und gespürt, wie seine süßen, heißen Tränen ihr Hauskleid durchnässten, dann hatte sie ihn in ihren Armen gewiegt und ihm gesagt, dass jetzt alles wieder gut sei, dass es nun vorbei sei, dass er ihr Junge sei, ihr braver Junge, ihr einziges Kind und die Liebe ihres Lebens, bis in alle Ewigkeit, ganz gleich, was der gute alte Harry davon halten mochte, ganz glech, was sonstwer davon halten mochte, weil keiner auf der ganzen Welt ihr so viel bedeutete wie er - sie gehörten auf ewig zusammen, im Angesicht Gottes, und dann streichelte, streichelte, streichelte sie ihn ohne Unterlass.
*Some information comes from Common Knowledge in other languages. Click "Edit" for more information.
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- Reviews
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- English, French, German, Polish
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- Paper, Ebook
- ISBNs
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