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You Come When I Call You
 
 

You Come When I Call You (Mass Market Paperback)

by Douglas Clegg (Author)
3.7 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (49 customer reviews)
Price: CDN$ 9.99 & eligible for FREE Super Saver Shipping on orders over CDN$ 39. Details
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Product Details


Product Description

From Publishers Weekly

Clegg gained attention last year for Naomi, his serialized horror novel that, arguably, was the first major work of fiction to originate in cyberspace. Genre cognoscenti, however, know him also for several acclaimed earlier novels, including The Halloween Man. Clegg's new book, which marks his first hardcover publication under his own name, is as powerful literarily and morally as anything he's written. Densely textured in plot, language and character, it tells of the 1980 destruction of the body and soul of a small desert town in California and of the resolution, 20 years later, of that supernaturally created holocaust; past and present mingle throughout, as if in a dream. The act of dreaming is a primary motif in the book, for the agent of destruction, Lamia ("lamia was fluid from steamy swamps... always feeding from the dying... until a depraved animal walking on two feet learned to pass lamia, to cultivate and worship lamia, to call it god, then demon...."), who, manifested in the body of a beautiful teenage girl, bends the reality of those upon whom she feeds, psychically and physically. Set amid the town's squalor of trailer parks, organized dogfights and fevered relationships of those with no escape, and also in the hard streets of Manhattan, a drug den in Los Angeles and elsewhere, the novel reads like a nightmare on paper as Clegg traces the fates of several of Lamia's victims. His imagery is intense, horrific, sexually violent--patricide, incestuous rape and cannibalism are among the crimes he envisions--but he paints with a poet's hand. Despite its monstrousness, his vision tenders a kind of hope; Lamia's destructive powers are balanced by another's force for healing, and, at novel's end, one victim recognizes the power of "grace." This is horror at its finest. (Mar.) FYI: Also in March but after Cemetery Dance's publication of this novel, Dorchester/Leisure will release a mass market edition ($5.99 400p ISBN 0-8439-4695-4).
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Book Description

An epic tale of horror, spanning twenty years in the lives of four friends?witnesses to unearthly terror. The high desert town of Palmetto, California, has turned toxic after twenty years of nightmares. In Los Angeles, a woman is tormented by visions from a chilling past, and a man steps into a house of torture. On the steps of a church, a young woman has been sacrificed in a ritual of darkness. In New York, a cab driver dreams of demons while awake. And a man who calls himself the Desolation Angel has returned to draw his old friends back to their hometown?a town where, two decades earlier, three boys committed the most brutal of rituals, an act of such intense savagery that it has ripped apart their minds. And where, in a cavern in a place called No Man's Land, something has been waiting a long time for those who stole something more precious than life itself.

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Customer Reviews

49 Reviews
5 star:
 (21)
4 star:
 (6)
3 star:
 (12)
2 star:
 (5)
1 star:
 (5)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
3.7 out of 5 stars (49 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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1.0 out of 5 stars You run when he calls you, May 11 2004
By Vagabond77 (Tennessee, USA) - See all my reviews
"You Come When I Call You" is not the best book I have ever read, and that is being kind. The book is about three very unbalenced adults who are experincing waking nightmares because of an event in their childhood. Douglas Clegg is not very forth coming with an explanation of where the bad guy (or girl) Wendy came from. We get her back story, but it makes little since. In fact very little in the book makes any since. It's like a combination of Stephen King and Hunter S. Thompson. The book is a nightmare logic, meaning it is all surreal images (and very disturbingly graphic) with almost no narritive thread. It's like a very bad acid trip. The three main charcters, Peter, Alison, and Charlie , all have their psyche so messed up by the event in childhood (they all seemed to have been possesed by a demon and killed everyone in their sleepy little southern California town) that they are not very useful narrating the action through. The book is almost 400 pages long, and it seems like much more than that. The book is like wading through soup. I have heard that Clegg is a good writer; I don't know, maybe I just started with the wrong book.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Short Attention Span Theatre; Poor Eyesight? Skip this one!, Jan 24 2004
By Mary Gollihugh "aka 'Ash' or Mariance" (On the Lake Erie Shoreline, PA) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
One of the downsides of buying online is sometimes you don't get a "feel" for the book. This particular book brought that home to me. Whoever wrote the blubs for these books is a far better writer than the author himself.
Mr Clegg writes like an overly complicated John Saul; not necassarily giving our heroes much of a shot at surviving, nor being very likable.
It is also written in such a poor font, that if you have poor eyesight, or suffer from headaches from eyestrain, this is definitely not worth the trouble.
His writing skips around like ants on a hot skillet, and the book was released without being completely proofread. misspelled words, poor phraseology ... there are so many stumbling blocks in the book it was a chore to finish, even for a book-o-holic like myself.
I dislike leaving poor reviews, but I wish I had known these things Before purchasing close over half his available releases. Mr Clegg, please forgive me as I may appear unkind ... I am simply trying so save other people their money's worth.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A disjointed affair, July 4 2003
By Matthew King (Toronto, Canada) - See all my reviews
(TOP 1000 REVIEWER)    (REAL NAME)   
You come when I call you is an ambitious horror novel. Instead of rehashing the well-beaten path of formulaic horror, it tries something new. I once read in an issue of Fangoria that Clegg struggled mightily writing this novel and actually took upwards of ten years to finish this book. Sadly, instead of delivering its promise, the novel falls flat on its face.

The story flip flops between two time frames. THEN takes place in 1980 in the sleepy desert town of Palmetto, California. We get to meet several teenage characters whose routine lifestyles are turned upside down when a demonic force takes over them and makes them perform brutal acts of murderous rage. NOW is set in 2000 and the teenagers are now grown adults living in different cities across the country and doing their best to forget the horrible memories of their past. But now the demon of their past is "calling" them and they will reunite in Palmetto in an attempt to put the demon that haunts them to rest once and for all.

This is not an easy book to read. So much of the events take place through dreams, memories, hallucinations and flashbacks. After a while it becomes hard to decipher what's real from what's not as well as if something's occuring now or if it happenned in the past.

The main secret behind this book seems to be of what ritual the kids performed that was so terrifying and that ended up scarring them emotionally. However, as I read deeper into the novel I found that I really didn't care anymore. Most of them have become dislikeable burnouts and schizophrenics that are difficult to sympathize with. The most thrilling part of the book was actually reading about two elderly ladies sitting on rocking chairs on their porch and recounting events of 40 years ago. How sad.

One major positive is that the ending is strong. But the last 50 pages still don't make up for the mud that were the first 350. After reading this exhaustive and confusing novel, I'm hesitating reading anything else by this author. Too bad because I liked its concept. Maybe I should try reading King's "IT" instead.

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Most recent customer reviews

4.0 out of 5 stars A nicely chilling horror tale
"You Come When I Call You" is different from other horror novels I've read, in that I tend to read vampire novels, and this one was about demons. Read more
Published on Mar 15 2003 by Tanja L. Edwards

1.0 out of 5 stars Please dont come any more Mr Clegg
This book was terrible. It lacked narrative, there was no real reason for any of the protagonists moves and it was poorly written. Read more
Published on Jan 11 2003 by John O'Kane

5.0 out of 5 stars You Will Read When Clegg Writes....
...Is the best way I can sum up the man's unique talent! This book is fantastic, and the man who wrote it deserves lots of praise. Read more
Published on Oct 10 2002 by Khrissy Choate

4.0 out of 5 stars Grisly
Doug Clegg seems to be on the short list of popular horror authors currently churning out tales of bleak terror. Read more
Published on Sep 19 2002 by Jeffrey Leach

3.0 out of 5 stars A good story, but I was expecting more...
A very good novel, but just that.

Good.

I was expecting more from Clegg. And I don't know how to quantify that. More. Read more

Published on Aug 19 2002 by Darren Jacks

3.0 out of 5 stars I like Clegg's early work...
But he's getting more convaluted with each novel. I guess he thinks it adds depth or some literary flair, but it doesn't serve the stories he tells very well. Read more
Published on Mar 15 2001

5.0 out of 5 stars Scary and thrilling
I borrowed this book from a friend, having never heard of Clegg or read anything by him. You Come When I Call You seemed like a strange name for a horror novel, and I guess that... Read more
Published on Dec 1 2000 by crsantamonica

2.0 out of 5 stars Tiresome and disappointing
From the reviews and description I was expecting so much more. So much of the narrative felt forced and self-indulgent. I wish an editor had come when Clegg called. Read more
Published on Nov 29 2000 by Erin Braun

5.0 out of 5 stars Best Clegg Book
Well this is the third book of Douglas Cleggs' that i have read, and I'll have to admit, it is the best. Read more
Published on Nov 10 2000 by Natalie Savage

5.0 out of 5 stars the best horror novel of the year
I am not a huge fan of horror books and movies. I love Stephen King and Peter Straub and sometimes Dean Koontz and sometimes Clive Barker. Read more
Published on Oct 27 2000

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