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Winter Tides
 
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Winter Tides (Hardcover)

by James Blaylock (Author)
3.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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5 new from CDN$ 64.27 5 used from CDN$ 12.89

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Product Description

From Library Journal

Haunted by the memory of only being able to save one twin girl from drowning, Dave Quinn abandons surfing for a safe life in Earl Dalton's theater-props company in Huntington Beach, California. When Canadian artist Anne Morris is drawn back to the town where twin sister Elinor drowned 15 years before, she and Dave find themselves shadowed by Elinor's malevolent spirit. Earl's son Edmund believes that Elinor's spirit is Anne's dark side and obsessively pursues her. Blaylock's (All the Bells on Earth, LJ 11/15/95) vivid descriptions and deft characterizations place ordinary flawed people in escalating horrific situations. This contemporary ghost story exposes the underbelly of human nature and belongs in most fantasy and horror collections.
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.


From Kirkus Reviews

More contemporary supernatural horror from the author of All the Bells on Earth (1995), etc. When surfer Dave Quinn saved a young girl from the sea, her twin sister eluded him and drowned. Now, 15 years later, Dave still lives in Huntington Beach, Calif., where he builds scenery for a theater warehouse owned by the rich Earl Dalton--this despite frequent clashes with Earl's creepy eldest son Edmund, whose interests include black magic, snuff movies, and defrauding Earl of various properties. The warehouse's latest employee is artist Anne Morris, whom Dave recognizes as the girl he saved. Anne's dead sister Elinor--a ghostly presence ever since she drowned--crafted a disturbing set of dolls and paintings, which Anne has kept. Edmund discovers the paintings and dolls and assumes they're Anne's; later, he's possessed by Elinor, discovers a secret entrance into Anne's apartment, and uses Elinor's dolls to set fires. Eventually, enraged by the growing closeness between Anne and Dave, and inspired by the evil Elinor, Edmund embarks on a campaign of arson, murder, kidnapping, and torture. A lovingly evoked ocean/beachscape, along with Blaylock's usual hardworking characters--but the drama never quite coheres, and the ending just dangles. -- Copyright ©1997, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (2)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
2 star:
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1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.8 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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2.0 out of 5 stars Not what I expected, Feb 4 2002
By Kelly L. (www.FantasyLiterature.com) (Columbia, MO United States) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)   
_Winter Tides_ disappointed me, but I suppose I must put the blame on the publisher rather than the author. Mainly I was miffed because the blurb on the back promised something totally different from what was actually in the book. The blurb spoke of a man named Dave, and his relationship with the girl he had saved from drowning years before, and with the ghost of her sister whom he failed to save. What I got was a novel about a psychopath named Edmund, who wasn't even mentioned on the cover.

Dave and the sisters were there, all right, but they were dealt with shallowly. Even when the story was being told from Dave or Anne's point of view, the author never really went deeply into what they were thinking or feeling, just their physical actions. Elinor, the ghost sister, gets even shorter shrift, and mainly seems to be a plot device. The romance between Dave and Anne is skimmed over, and both of their feelings for Elinor are summed up in a few sentences here and there. The only intricate characterization in the book is that of Edmund, a true loony who thinks torturing people is a fine art form. Blaylock does a good job of depicting him, but I wasn't expecting a psychopath story, I don't really like psychopath stories, they're just not my thing. I was led to expect a ghost story and a love story.

If you like novels about psychopaths and serial killers, go ahead and buy this--it's well done if you like that sort of thing. Blaylock's subtlety and restraint leave the worst bits to the imagination, thereby creating a more palpable terror. Just don't buy this if you're looking for a dark fantasy or a romance.

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3.0 out of 5 stars Dark supernatural horror from the author of "Land of Dreams", Mar 19 1999
By rampageous_cuss (Under Billy Penn's Hat) - See all my reviews
This is a kind of tricky one - there were some great elements but some loss-of-nerve as well - it could have been better. I really loved "The Paper Grail" which is evidentally more the classic Blaylock - fantasy in a contemporary setting with engaging characters. This is a supernatural horror story with one of the greatest occult villains I've run across, but somehow Blaylock wimps out before delivering the level of terror the character calls for. The romance between the hero and heroine never develops the necessary depth either, though the characters are, as always, well drawn. 4 stars for characterization, 3 for atmosphere, 2 for story.
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5.0 out of 5 stars A beautifully written adult fantasy., Sep 29 1997
By R. Adams (Lancaster, PA USA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
James P Blaylock's books are always worth reading. More than that, they are worth buying. In hardcover. Winter Tides is no exception. A Blaylockian blend of fantasy and horror, destruction and redemption, Winter Tides invites the reader to join Dave Quinn as he tries to make sense out of the increasingly weird and creepy things that come home to roost at the theatrical warehouse where he works. And, in Edmund Dalton, a pure capitalist if ever there was one, Blaylock has created his most nasty bad guy yet. But this is no routine fantasy, no tossed-off suspense thriller. It is a welcome return to the skewed perspective of James P Blaylock. He is one of the very few writers who can make his characters seem familiar, not because we've met them before, but because we recognize their humanity as our own. We may never experience their adventures, but we get a glimpse of how we might act if we started seeing ghosts in the ocean mist. Buy this book. Read this book. Tell your friends about this book. Buy it for your friends. You will not be disappointed. Neither will your friends.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Blaylock is one of the best!
Winter Tides is another very, very good book by one of the best authors of this genre. The only real complaints I have about Blaylock are 1) I wish he wrote books faster so I... Read more
Published on Aug 17 1997 by lwd@hal-pc.org

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