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Escardy Gap
 
 

Escardy Gap (Paperback)

by Peter Crowther (Author) "The heat had a sound like a note plucked from a taut wire ..." (more)
3.2 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)

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Product Description

From Library Journal

In the tradition of Stephen King, this novel combines an author overcoming writer's block with a macabre tale?here the siege of an idyllic town by a trainload of murderous, inhuman passengers. As the writer types toward the conclusion, the characters seem to exist outside his imagination. Vivid descriptions and characterizations will attract King's readers. Highly recommended for horror and sf collections.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.


From Kirkus Reviews

Very long fantasy/horror debut novel that doesn't pick up steam for 250 pages, then becomes passably inventive of its kind. Crowther and Lovegrove's story burdens itself with a dreary, clich‚-strewn opening (a novel-within-the-novel) about an old, self-pitying, burned-out Manhattan novelist suffering with writer's block. When he does suddenly begin to write again, he tells about the arrival of a mysterious train at Escardy Gap, an idyllic village. For the next several hundred pages, the authors paste together genre banalities; Escardy Gap itself is a flimsy site, filled with stereotypical townsfolk/murder victims. The train brings a fairly (by contrast) distinct crew of demons, called The Company, who are deceptively pleasant before they begin maiming, disembowelling, or poisoning the innocent people who welcome them into their homes. Their leader is the aimless but murderous Jeremiah Rackstraw. His troupe includes Mr. Olesqui, a midget who kills with tobacco smoke; Boy, whose handless arms create their own forms of energy; Buzz Beaumont, who spews great fireballs of electricity; Agnes Destiny, who trails bunches of limp phalli (her own) along the floor; Clarence, a shapechanger who can mimic anybody or reinvent himself as a monster; Felcher the poisoner; and rhymester Neville N. Nolan, Rackstaw's Ariel, who can transform himself into a giant horsefly with gemlike eyes, capable of finding anyone anywhere. Also appearing: Alecto, Atrops, and Aegle, ravishingly beautiful Man-eaters who give new meaning to the term vagina dentata. The more-or-less heroine is beautiful young Sara Sienkeiwicz, who publishes stories in Weird Tales and, like Faulkner's Eula Mae Varner, drives all men mad. Her role is entirely passive, since the old writer (who increasingly loses control of his own story to The Company) tries to frustrate the efforts of his own youthful hero, Josh Knight, to save her, preserving Sara for himself. Lighthearted butchery, an intermittently lively dance around the maypole staged in an abattoir. -- Copyright ©1996, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

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3.2 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars Bow, wow wow!, Jun 27 2004
By A Customer
Ce commentaire est de: Escardy Gap (Hardcover)
A real turkey, a real dog. "Something Wicked This Way Comes" this is not. But it sure would like to be. And nothing offends me more than pretentious writing, unless it is a writer who writes about having writer's block. This author does both.

First we have the hackneyed plot: the too-good virgin town is paid a visit from Hell by a too-bad evil train, whose occupants proceed to trash the place by preying upon the townspeople's "secret" flaws. (With two exceptions, EVERYBODY dies, including the train, which is disembowled in a squishy blood-and-guts scene that goes on just as long and just as disbelievingly as the story itself.) But the characters don't simply play their roles; they psychoanalyze them. For pages upon end.

Then we have the fact that the townspeople have no good reason to be so good, AND the evils have no good reason to be so evil, AND both parties actually say so! So we have... no real plot, no real story, every cliche you can think of, and no reason for any of it to exist.

Which, I guess, is why I found the book for $2 in one of those stores where books go to die. This dawg deserved its fate.

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4.0 out of 5 stars Get past the 1st half for a great finish, Feb 28 2000
Ce commentaire est de: Escardy Gap (Mass Market Paperback)
I found this novel to be very tough to rate. The first 200 pages were forgetable; too many cliches, too much over-the-top characterization, too many characters, and too many bad guys. But then, the plot started to take hold. We delve down into the major characters and begin to see them grow. The quirky plot device of getting the "main" character (the author who is writing this tale) actually into the novel seemed contrived at first and almost hokey but somehow, they pull it off. My interest level definitely perked up and I rode the final pages of the book like a wave. When I finished the last chapter, I wanted to give it 5 stars but must cut back to only 4 because of the long drawn-out build-up in the beginning. The gory parts (and there are a lot of them) are very gory but often original. All in all, worth it in the end.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A cross between King and Bradbury, Mar 10 1999
By Amy Liz (San Diego, CA USA) - See all my reviews
Ce commentaire est de: Escardy Gap (Mass Market Paperback)
I recommend this novel if for no other reason than to revel in the sheer joy of its language. Crowther and Lovegrove clearly had fun writing this book, and I had a great time reading it.
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4.0 out of 5 stars A darker shade of Bradbury
Okay, I'll admit it. I bought this book because of the cool train on the cover. So sue me. Luckily I ended up with a very unique horror novel. Lisez davantage
Published on Feb 3 1999

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