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Abandon
 
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Abandon [Mass Market Paperback]

Sean Desmond
2.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (6 customer reviews)

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"Was it a ghost? Or madness? Or murder? Sean Desmond keeps us spellbound in this richly textured, truly scary thriller...an unforgettable reading experience."--Peter Maas, author of Underboss and Serpico

"A chilling and seductive first novel that will keep...[readers] at the edge of their seats."--Brian McGrory, Boston Globe columnist and author of The Incumbent

"Desmond offers up a combination ghost story and pychological thriller to take notice of...it's an atmospheric story conjuring up images of Henry James."--The Denver Post

Product Description

There are worse places an Ivy Leaguer-desperate to restore a tattered academic career-can pass the mist-shrouded New England autumn of his senior year. There is serenity on the secluded fourth floor of the cavernous stone dormitory, marred only by the occasional echoed footfall on the stairs or muffled voice in the corridor. The atmosphere is ripe for quiet study-until it begins....Floorboards creak in seemingly deserted hallways. Phantom whispers stir the silence. Invisible eyes seem to lurk, watching. At last, an enigmatic stranger emerges from the shadows, claiming to be a fellow student. But nobody else can see or hear the presence that seeps in like fog rolling off the Charles River. Nobody else can sense, with growing dread, the terrible truth....Decades have passed since the murky accident that claimed the lives of three Adams House residents. But somebody wants to relive-and punish-the sins of the past. Somebody is preying on the dorm`s current occupants, even as one of their peers descends slowly into a surreal world where madness meets mayhem; where nothing is certain but the chilling suspicion that what has happened before can-and must-happen once again....

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Customer Reviews

6 Reviews
5 star:
 (1)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
 (2)
1 star:
 (1)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
2.8 out of 5 stars (6 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great Book ..., Jan 17 2003
By 
"mthompsonsf" (San Francisco, CA United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Abandon (Mass Market Paperback)
...I truly enjoyed the novel; it makes you work to put the story together, and the author throws in twists and turns every step of the way. If you enjoy movies like: American Beauty, American Psycho, eXistenZ, Johnny Darko, Seven, or other movies that don't provide a straight forward, easy to digest message and challenge you to create your own - then you will enjoy this novel. I cannot think of a single novel to compare it to.

... and it provides hours of discussion because it is so interesting to work through as you try to pull together what did or may have happened. Is there a ghost? Is the story a lie? Who is the narrator? Who died? Did they really die? It is a dark novel, but it is fun.

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1.0 out of 5 stars Abandon...hope all ye who pick up this novel, May 24 2002
By 
This review is from: Abandon (Mass Market Paperback)
Abandon sounded promising. I was prepared for a quick, scary read. But what I got was neither.

I'm normally a very quick reader, flying through books. So I knew there was something wrong when it took me a week to read Abandon. The problem wasn't me, it was the book. Almost nothing happens in the novel. It's slow moving and, quite frankly, boring. Much of the narrative is repetitive, focusing on the inner turmoil a narrator we don't know enough about to care. Characters are poorly developed, the action isn't well plotted and the entire book moves in fits and starts. And as our narrator describes his "descent into hell" things only get more confused and more boring.

Desmond's attempt to write a more literary horror novel fails in almost every respect. By the time I reached the last page, I just didn't care anymore. The verdict: don't bother.

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3.0 out of 5 stars So-So Poe, May 21 2002
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This review is from: Abandon (Mass Market Paperback)
This is one of those walk-the-line supernatural/psychological horror stories, a la Henry James or Edgar Allen Poe, in which you can never quite be sure whether ghosts are influencing events, or the protagonist of the piece is psychotic. It's a tough genre to pull off, and Desmond half succeeds - which means he half doesn't. I probably would have liked this book more, if it: a. wasn't so hallucinogenic that it's hard to follow; b. was told in something other than first person, so it wasn't so hard to follow; and c. was clearer on what was going on, so it wasn't so hard to follow. It doesn't help matters any that I'm a jaded reader of this very genre, and recently read Graham Masterton's Trauma, which is very similar but much better written and more effective.

That said, Abandon does at least tell a coherent story, once you go back and re-read a few things and puzzle it out. It meanders a bit, and it becomes fairly clear early on that the protagonist is less influenced by ghosts than he is simply criminally schizophrenic - put more simply, I never believed any ghosts were present (even if some nominal doors are left open for that interpretation), and was far ahead of the surprise plot revelations the whole way.

The greatest problem this book has is that none of its characters are really sympathetic. The most sympathy that can be evinced is for the victims, not because they are likeable (or unlikeable either, for that matter), but simply because they don't deserve to be murdered. None of them are developed enough to have any feelings about, one way or the other - they merely exist as ciphers for the crazed protagonist to deal with. The protagonist (who is never even given a name) tells the entire story in first-person narrative, and is so painfully self-absorbed that an unbiased presentation of the victims wouldn't be possible anyway, even if he bothered to talk about them more.

This would make a good movie, if the plot were presented more comprehensibly. However, the slated upcoming Paramount film sounds actually more confusing than its source material - it turns the protagonist into a woman (Katie Holmes), which, given some of the plot turns of the novel, is going to be problematic at best...though it sounds, from early reports, as if it's all been pretty thoroughly rewritten into a completely different piece, anyway.

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