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Mischief
 
 

Mischief (Mass Market Paperback)

de Douglas Clegg (Author)
3.7étoiles sur 5  Voir tous les commentaires (29 évaluations de client)
Price: CDN$ 9.99 & se qualifie pour Livraison super-économique GRATUITE pour des commandes de plus de CDN$ 39. Détails
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From Publishers Weekly

In a banner year that has already seen his supernatural horror opus You Come When I Call You in mass market plus his dark suspense thriller Purity (Forecasts, June 5), Clegg now tallies a contemporary occult mystery. Harrow, a prep school housed in a converted mansion in the upper Hudson River Valley, seems "a solidly mediocre addition to the roster of private schools for boys." But its disturbingly dissonant architecture and shadowy historyAwhich includes a legacy of student suicidesAsuggest a singularly malign spirit. Its newest victim is teenager Jim Hook, who's abducted into the byzantine bowels of the school by a cloaked coven of students who call themselves the Cadaver Society. Desperate to be saved from shame, Jim consents to join them and endures ghoulish initiation rites that apprise him of the school's historical link to celebrity Satanists as well as stoke psychic trauma dating back to his childhood. Clegg introduces more characters and subplots than can be satisfyingly woven into this slim spookerAwhich is the second episode in a projected trilogy whose prequel, Nightmare House, is an e-serial evolving at the Harrow Haunting Web site (www. ehaunting.com). But despite the tale's lack of resolution, he draws eerily plausible parallels between the arcane rituals of academic institutions and esoteric occultists, and imbues Harrow with an atmosphere of menace thick enough to support further flights of dark fantasy. Given its Web connection and Clegg's growing reputation, the Harrow Haunting trilogy could be Clegg's most popular work yet. Simultaneous publication in mass market paperback by Leisure. (Oct.)
Copyright 2000 Reed Business Information, Inc. --Ce texte provient d'une édition qui n'est plus publiée ou qui est non diponible.


From the Publisher

Douglas Clegg, Bram Stoker and International Horror Guild award-winning writer, has begun a story of haunting -- and something in a dark house that has been awakened...in Mischief, the most horrifying coming-of-age experience is happening in a house of nightmarish spirits.

The mansion overlooks the Hudson River, just outside the town of Watch Point, New York. It has been empty for decades, but now, it's a private school for boys. And one of the boys, Jim Hook, should never have come to Harrow Academy...

For, within the walls, something horrifying awaits him...a haunting more disturbing than any other...

A group of misfits and malcontents want Jim in their dark fraternity...

And the house called Harrow is hungry.

The new novel of terror from Douglas Clegg, author of You Come When I Call You, The Halloween Man, Bad Karma, and The Nightmare Chronicles.


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L'avis des consommateurs

29 évaluations
5 étoiles:
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3.7étoiles sur 5 (29 évaluations de client)
 
 
 
 
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3.0étoiles sur 5 dull haunting, Mai 31 2004
Par Vagabond77 (Tennessee, USA) - Voir tous mes commentaires
Douglas Clegg wrote the wonderful "Nightmare House", and I couldn't wait to go on and read the second book in the Harrow Trilogy. While it wasn't near as bad as "You Come When I Call You", it was pretty dull in parts. I was really wanting something supernatural based, but there was little of that. The book is about Jim Hook, who attends a private prep school for boys. Jim got caught cheating on a test and is about to be thrown out of school. Jim is then introduced to a secret society called the Cadaver Club. This club was involved, somehow, in the death of Jim's brother and father years ago. Ok, this is where things get dense. What is the club's reasoning for wanting Jim? What is the history of the Cadaver Club? Clegg was very vauge on the origins and importance of the club. He hides motives with torture and brainwashing methods streight out of "The Mancherian Canidate". The haunted house angle is only introduced in the last ten pages, and I have to say I was pretty disappionted (though the Templer Knight skeleton was kind of cool). Jim Hook is pretty bland charactor, not appealing in the least bit; sad to say Hook is the best character of the bunch. But on the sunny side things, "Mischief" is a fast read and pretty exciting, in spurts. It's a shame it dosn't answere most of the questions it brings up. I guess I will go on to the next book and see if the story makes any more since.
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4.0étoiles sur 5 Good short novel, not flawless though..., Juil 24 2003
"Mischief" tells the tale of Jim Hook, a young adolescent trying to find his way. From Jim's perspective, he is little more than a shadow of his older brother, and Jim's worship of him plays a large part in Jim's motivations in life. When his brother dies in a car wreck, Jim tries to honor his memory by being the best he can be. Enrolled in the same prep academy as his late mentor, Jim's story take flight.

Harrow is the school, which stands on the grounds of an ancient mansion, renovated over the years with numerous additions to the building. Once, it was a residence. Today, it is a school.

It has always been haunted.

Jim is a normal kid, and Clegg brings him to life. He's got a girlfriend, he works hard, and he makes the usual teenager mistakes. When Jim falls in with the Cadaver Society, his life takes a sharp turn. The Cadavers are a secret society within the walls of Harrow; they seem to be average pranksters... or maybe more.

There are moments of genuine fright with "Mischief", along with scenes of dead-on realism, especially when Clegg examines the relationship between young Jim and his girl, Lark. Clegg's voice can cut to the bone at times, and he uses smart phrasings combined with sly wit. For a horror novel, Clegg keeps the suspense high and the gore under control.

It is not without its flaws. For one, I've been told that this book is a sequel (part 2 of 3), but there is nothing to indicate this within the book or on the cover. For me, this means that reading the first book is out of the question, since most events were probably recollected during "Mischief". The ending of "Mischief" sucks. Period. It wraps up nothing while the writing plunges into the nonsensical for those last 20 pages. This is a shame since the bulk of the novel was a joy.

I still recommend "Mischief". Clegg tells a fine tale with true suspense and a good sense of fear. There are times where you can't predict where the story is going to go. There are other times where you just can't wait to turn to the next page, compelled by fear to know how things turn out. I blew through this short book in one afternoon and evening, finishing it off just as the twilight breathed its last gasp...

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1.0étoiles sur 5 'this is un-original', Fév 6 2003
Par Un client
The beginig is good, great, but after that, [the first 2-3 pages] it faltered. Why children story? Dont know. May be metaphore. Well, Dan Simmons did a better job on this subject. The book is slow and not horror at all. This author has the potential to become another Peter Straub but he has to work seriously on it by studying Straub's book.
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Commentaires client les plus récents

3.0étoiles sur 5 Haunted Houses...
...or schools in this case. I bought this book after reading Douglas Clegg's prequel "Nightmare House"(published by Cemetery Dance) which gives a good background for... Read more
Publié le Déc 31 2002

2.0étoiles sur 5 Meandering and pointless
This book reads more like a stream of consciousness than it does a well-written novel. It's comprised of a series of unusual events (none of which make much sense or are explained... Read more
Publié le Sep 5 2002

3.0étoiles sur 5 Good, but Clegg has fallen in love with haunted houses...
and ghost stories. Clegg is a great writer and knows how to craft a story and deliver the usual chills and thrills. Read more
Publié le Aoû 19 2002 par Darren Jacks

2.0étoiles sur 5 Below Average Horror
Despite being unimpressed by Halloween Man, I wanted to give Clegg another chance and checked out Mischief. Read more
Publié le Mars 25 2002 par Chris MB

5.0étoiles sur 5 Need Background for The Infinite?
This great stand-alone story of Harrow House, now a school for boys opens itself to young Jim and helps in horrifying ways to answer questions regarding the death of his... Read more
Publié le Fév 26 2002 par MontiLee Stormer

2.0étoiles sur 5 What this book has in atmosphere, it lacks in coherence
I read Mischief in three days but not because I couldn't put it down--it was because I wanted to get through it. Read more
Publié le Déc 6 2001

4.0étoiles sur 5 A Good Halloween Read
Douglas Clegg's Mischief is a quick, light read. It is not the type of horror novel that will have you afraid to turn the lights off. Read more
Publié le Oct. 21 2001 par Christine Lynn Jones

5.0étoiles sur 5 Quick, Entertaining Novel
I have to disagree with some of the other reviewers who felt this book was unoriginal, and not worth your time. Read more
Publié le Jui 16 2001 par Matt C

5.0étoiles sur 5 Dead Poets Society meets Hell House
This one was a fast breezy read through an eerie landscape of horror. Dead Poets Society meets Hell House, basically, although this doesn't do it justice. Read more
Publié le Mai 8 2001 par jwwrite

2.0étoiles sur 5 Been there, done that
For the first time, I picked up a Douglas Clegg novel. I've heard great things about this guy so I was curious. Read more
Publié le Mai 6 2001 par Sebastien Pharand

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