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4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (14 customer reviews)

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4.5 out of 5 stars
4.5 out of 5 stars
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5.0 out of 5 stars Never Rest April 22 2004
Format:Hardcover
There exist many different kinds of horror. On one side, you have the more visceral and violent kind. On the other, you have the more quiet and emotional one. The Night Country, an amazingly affective novel, falls into this second category. Written with much soul and emotion, it's a nearly poetic treatise about the sadness of death and the sadness of life.

The story takes place a year after a horrible car crash that left four teenagers dead, one badly injured and one unharmed. Now, a year later, the ghosts of the departed ones look at the world and the people who used to matter in their lives. It is now the eve of Halloween, the day when, one year ago, the accident happened. We follow these characters for twenty-four hours, until the very tragic end of the story.

The story follows many different subplots that all merge into one. You have Brookes, the cop who was the first to arrive at the scene of the accident and who has been badly scarred by it ever since. You have Tim, the only one who survived unharmed and who hasn't been able to deal with the event. And you have Kyle, who survived the crash but who was left damaged in more ways than one, and his parents.

As our narrator, the late Marco, tells us what happens to these characters, the other ghosts often argue with him or come in to tell us their brief version of things. O'Nan weaves his narrative in such a way that you never quite know where the book is taking you. Well, you know where it is trying to go although you wish it will never get there.

The Night Country is a book that is all about death. There is very little joy to be found in this story. Instead, what you find is sadness. These characters are too badly scarred to ever be able to mend their lives back into what they used to be.

Powerful, touching and incredibly affective, The Night Country is that rare horror novels that achieves greatness on many levels. You will not soon forget these characters, nore will you forget this powerful tale of mourning without hope. O'Nan has just found himself a new fan. I can't wait to read his other books!

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5.0 out of 5 stars Home is where your losses are... April 3 2004
Format:Hardcover
The Night Country begins with a seductive invitation: "Come then, come with us, out into the night... come stalk the dark back roads and stand outside the bright houses, calm as murderers in the yard, quiet as deer."

It's Cabbage Night, the night before Hallowe'en in Avon, Connecticut, and you've just been invited to spend some quality time with Marco and Toe and Danielle, beginning on this cool autumn night that "smells of dust and coriander on the wind."

"It's the best time of year up here," Marco tells us - "witch hunts and woodsmoke... a 'new' England... veined with black rivers and massacres."

Marco and Danielle and Toe are three sweet, feisty, and very likeable teens, or at least they were until last Hallowe'en when, joyriding around the back roads, tired after working at their menial jobs, but happy just being together - "wanting the night to last forever" - they die in a horrific accident. Also in the car are Kyle, their bud-dealing Goth pal, and Tim, Danielle's sweet, introspective boyfriend.

Part of Kyle survives the accident, but with brain damage so severe that his personality, his prickly rebelliousness, is deadened. "Imagine diving off a five story building and landing on your face," suggests Marco. "Now imagine getting better." Kyle's nose and cheeks and forehead are prostheses - "only his chin is the same, and his hands."

Tim, Danielle's boyfriend, is the only one to survive the accident physically intact, but he's lost everything - all of the friendship and love that gave his life its meaning. Plagued by loss and survivor's guilt, he no longer feels any sense of belonging to - or in - the world.

More than the dead, these living victims haunt Officer Brooks, the police officer who initiates the high speed chase that precipitates the accident, but it's the dead who mess with Brooksie's head, sitting, invisible, in his kitchen teasing his dogs to make them bark - egging him on to commit the unspeakable - "We've seen him hang up his gun in slow motion, deliberate as a horror flick, and only Toe's twisted enough to make the holster swing, a cheesy temptation." Toe's ghost is twitching for vindication and revenge - he was the one behind the wheel, seemingly responsible for his own death as well as his friends'.

Danielle's ghost tries desperately to soothe Tim's appalling loneliness, and to fend off his desire to join her - "This must be how Dylan Klebold felt," Tim thinks on the heartbreaking anniversary of the accident - "knowing he was going to school the next day and never coming home." And Marco narrates it all for us with a kind of edgy detachment as the six characters are compelled to act out the final scenes of their intimately enmeshed lives and deaths.

Loneliness and isolation stalk through the pages of The Night Country as Kyle's mom struggles with the pity she can't abide and the fear of being perceived as a monster if she tries to move beyond her grief to resume a normal life, and Officer Brooks struggles to atone for the one tragic mistake that he made too late in his career and his life to forgive himself. Tim is a pariah now - the kids at school see his dead friends as legends, and Tim as an anomaly - not a lucky survivor, but a victim, the other one who should have died.

The book ends in a cataclysmic liebestodt of vindication and vengeance, remembrance and redemption, and in its final paragraph answers Marco's poignant question, "Where would we be if love ended at death?"

The emotional impact of this book belies its brevity. As with much of what Mr. O'Nan writes, I had a good cry reading it - several of them, in fact. The weird part was, my box of tissues kept disappearing and then turning up someplace that I knew I hadn't left it. Toe, probably. He'd be twisted enough.

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4.0 out of 5 stars a great story April 1 2004
By brendy
Format:Hardcover
I live in Avon Ct, and this book captures my town perfectly. It is not that i live in Avon that i love this book, it really is moving and powerful, without being too sappy and unreal. It sort of takes a very real situation, a deadly car crash on old farms road, and shows how much the living and dead are effected by the tragedy. i read this book any time i had the chance because it was so phenomonal. it is a quick read, but it leaves lasting impressions. powerful book. i recommend this book, if you have ever lived in a small suburb, you can understand this book.
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Most recent customer reviews
5.0 out of 5 stars EXCELLENT READING OF AN EERIE TALE
Versatile voice performer John Tye brings a moving reading to this spectral tale of an American tragedy.

It is, in actuality, a ghost story. Read more

Published on Jan 17 2004 by Gail Cooke
4.0 out of 5 stars A Modern Horror Story???
More like a modern ghost story. This story is skillfully written, expressing images of a small town, its inhabitants, and its fears. Read more
Published on Jan 11 2004 by Joy
5.0 out of 5 stars GHOSTLY TALE
Stewart O'Nan's THE NIGHT COUNTRY is a mesmerizing, provocative, and ultimately tragic little book. Despite its length, it packs a tremendous amount of characterization and... Read more
Published on Nov 30 2003 by Michael Butts
5.0 out of 5 stars In the end, we are all alone
Stewart O'Nan continues his exploration of the unknowable, uncontrollable, but inevitable effects of extraordinary events on ordinary, singular lives. Read more
Published on Nov 18 2003
5.0 out of 5 stars This multi-faceted ghost story is satisfyingly spooky
At midnight on Halloween in New England, five teens are killed in a car wreck. A year later the three who died come back, summoned by memories of their friends, on a last mission. Read more
Published on Nov 6 2003 by Midwest Book Review
5.0 out of 5 stars A Suburban Ghost Story
"The Night Country" is a modern ghost story about the aftermath of a car crash which kills three teens and injures two others. Read more
Published on Oct 31 2003 by Adrift in Suburbia
4.0 out of 5 stars Atmospheric, psychological tale of demonic possession
An aura of menace gathers around narrator Amanda as strange mood swings and irritating tapping-thumping noises in the walls begin to disrupt her happily married life. Read more
Published on Oct 20 2003 by Lynn Harnett
3.0 out of 5 stars Ghosts of guilt
In the first chapter of this poignant ghost story, the (as yet unnamed) narrator invites the reader to come along on Halloween. "Come then, come with us, out into the night.... Read more
Published on Oct 20 2003 by Lynn Harnett
5.0 out of 5 stars O'nan is a master of the Suburban Gothic...
The best horror novel of 2003. Yes, it's bleak, but it's about the death of three teenagers in a car crash. Read more
Published on Oct 16 2003 by W. Black
3.0 out of 5 stars Too bleak for me
I picked up this book somewhat by accident and, after reading the cover reviews, figured I would really enjoy it, as I have read other books by O'Nan and enjoyed them. Read more
Published on Oct 15 2003 by Ann M. Willis
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