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The Barrens and Others
 
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The Barrens and Others (Paperback)

by F. P Wilson (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 25.50
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Product Description

From Amazon.com

The Barrens and Others may be the collection that F. Paul Wilson fans have been waiting for. It consists of 12 previously published stories, and 2 previously unpublished works--a stage adaptation of "Pelts" and a teleplay called "Glim-Glim."

The collection runs the gamut from gory horror stories to bizarre supernatural tales, and in each piece, one thing is glaringly obvious--Wilson knows how to write people. From the sociopath in "Tenants" to the vigilante repairman in "A Day in the Life" (who also appeared in "The Tomb" and Legacies), Wilson's characters are painfully accurate and believable. Even when the plot line is flimsy, they carry the story. "Feelings," though a somewhat predictable bad-man-learns-lesson tale, boasts one of the best greedy-lawyer characters in print.

The Barrens and Others is a showcase for F. Paul Wilson's imagination, but the real hidden gems in this collection are actually the brief narratives that precede each story. Read in succession, they offer an anecdotal, autobiographical account of Wilson's writing career. --Mara Friedman --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.



From Publishers Weekly

"This was the stuff of Twilight Zone," frets a bewitched character in the first story in this worthwhile collection, setting the tone for the remaining selections. Though its contents range from dark suspense to light fantasy, the 12 stories and two stage and television scripts that make up Wilson's first full-length compilation since Soft and Others (1989) all have a macabre edge honed on the hard experiences of their characters. In "Slasher," the bereaved father of a murdered girl confronts the self-destructive potential of his rage when he accepts the help of an enigmatic FBI agent with clues to the killer's whereabouts. In "Faces," a serial killer's penchant for mutilating faces is a key to her identity. While Wilson's insights into the psychology of victim and villain are intriguingly complex, his prose is lean and flexible. It wends the narratives of the biter-bit tales "Definitive Therapy" and "A Day in the Life" (an all-too-rare short adventure of urban mercenary hero Repairman Jack) through complicated cloverleaves of plot and subplot, and it lays a groundwork of solid credibility for the title story, a dark gem that levers Lovecraftian horrors out of the wilds of the New Jersey Pine Barrens. Wilson's fearless willingness to engage reader sympathies can sometimes turn preachy, as in the ghoulish anti-fur tale "Pelts." Overall, though, these stories are a welcome riposte to the nihilism and gratuitous violence of much contemporary crime and horror fiction.
Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:
 (1)
3 star:    (0)
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most helpful customer reviews

 
4.0 out of 5 stars Not A Dud In The Bunch!, Jul 4 2003
By Daniel V. Reilly (Upstate New York, United States) - See all my reviews
Author F. Paul Wilson made a fan out of me with his stunningly original novel The Keep, a tale of Nazis facing Lovecraftian horror in a Romanian castle. I became a fan of his Repairman Jack character in The Tomb, a sequel to The Keep, and that led me to The Barrens and Others, where Jack makes a belated return in the story A Day In The Life. It's rare to find a really good short story collection, and this is Wilson's second; The first was the amazing collection Soft and Others.

The stories here include:
Feelings, where a greedy Lawyer learns empathy the hard way.
Tenants, which finds an escaped killer hiding out with an old man
and his VERY unusual boarders.
Faces, a different spin on the serial killer tale, concerning a
hideously deformed girl who kills beautiful people in a
truly gruesome manner. (These three stories all take place
in the town of Monroe, and tie in with Wilson's Adversary
Cycle, which began in The Keep.)
A Day In The Life features the return of Repairman Jack, and will
be a real treat for Jack's legions of fans. No
supernatural stuff, just straightforward action/adventure.
The Tenth Toe, a humorous take on black magic in the old west,
starring Doc Holiday and featuring Wyatt Earp.
Slasher is a crackerjack revenge yarn with a jaw-dropper of an
ending.
Definitive Therapy features DC Comic's Batman villain The Joker.
No Batman, no action, just The Joker and his new
shrink exploring the depths of madness in Arkham Asylum.
Wilson delivers another killer twist at the end.
Topsy is a short tale of gluttony revolving around a morbidly
obese man hospitalized after a fall at home. Any EC
Comics fan will see the end coming, but it's a fun read
nonetheless.
Rockabilly features Dick Tracy and his coolest rogues gallery
member, Mumbles. "Kz maz, kpr!!" Loads of fun, as Mumbles
tries to become the next Elvis.
Bob Dylan, Troy Johnson, and the Speed Queen is the tale of a
time-traveller who goes back to the sixties to "create"
some classic rock tunes. Sci-fi isn't my cup of tea, but
Wilson did a good job of holding my interest here.
Pelts is Wilson's goriest tale, which is clearly an anti-fur
screed, but also works as grand-guignol. There's some real
stomach-churners in this story...
Wilson also includes the scripts for the aborted stage
adaptation of Pelts (Which would have been a sight to
see!) and Glim-Glim, an alien-invasion tale that was
produced for the TV series Monsters. Wilson prefaces each
story with a short introduction, and these alone are
worth the purchase price. My only quibble with the book is
that it didn't include some of his other Repairman Jack
short stories, such as The Last Rakosh, which are almost
impossible to find.

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5.0 out of 5 stars The man is a genius!, Jun 1 2002
By Phil Aldridge (Yorba Linda, CA United States) - See all my reviews
F. Paul Wilson had me hooked after The Keep, and I just recently acquire this book. He is so clever and versatile, and all the stories are great. Some are supernatural, some a creepy, some are just unsettling because of its plausability, and Wilson never leaves you a way out. You get hooked and you get rocked. This man is a genius and a short story master in the tradition of Lovecraft, King, and Matheson.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Outstanding mixed genre short story collection, May 22 1999
By A Customer
I have mixed feelings about this collection. On one hand, I want to applaud the design, commentary and stories Wilson has gathered in this volume. One might be tempted to use it to teach a course on writing. Wilson provides unique insight into the processes that gave birth to these tales, including even a play and teleplay. He also disperses throughout the introductions his personal experiences with the entertainment community. I think it's both insightful and fascinating. The caliber of work presented is a testament to Wilson's success as a "NY Times Best Selling Author." His selections cover a variety of genres, providing a vast supply of fuel for the reader's imagination. However, on the other hand does the average reader want all this extra material? True, they could skip that material, even the play and teleplay. Are they then getting their moneys worth? I believe they are. Fans of Wilson's Repairman Jack are sure to find THE BARRENS AND OTHERS a wickedly entertaining literary adventure. It is an exceptional collection of short prose that deserves a place on the shelf of both the leisure reader and aspiring/professional writer.
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Most recent customer reviews

5.0 out of 5 stars THE BARRENS is not to be missed!
Anyone who's read a word of F. Paul Wilson's has probably read everything they can get their hands on. THE BARRENS AND OTHERS should be no exception. Read more
Published on May 12 1999 by garrettp@aug.com

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