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(Paperback - Reprint)
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| Paperback - Reprint | $13.25 |
| Mass Market Paperback - Reprint | $7.99 |
| Other Format | $15.60 |
Mr. Hood's Holiday House has stood for a thousand years, welcoming countless children into its embrace. It is a place of miracles, a blissful rounds of treats and seasons, where every childhood whim may be satisfied...
There is a price to be paid, of course, but young Harvey Swick, bored with his life and beguiled by Mr. Hood's wonders, does not stop to consider the consequences. It is only when the House shows it's darker face when Harvey discovers the pitiful creatures that dwell in its shadows that he comes to doubt Mr. Hood's philanthropy.
The House and its mysterious architect are not about to release their captive without a battle, however. Mr. Hood has ambitious for his new guest, for Harvey's soul burns brighter than any soul he has encountered in a thousand years...
After a mysterious stranger promises to end his boredom with a trip to the magical Holiday House, ten-year-old Harvey learns that his fun has a high price.
Menacing demons, wondrous miracles, sinister magic, and vivid characters make Thief a compulsive, lightning-paced tales that almost begs to be read aloud.
More Reviews and RecommendationsA diversely talented and always chilling writer-artist, Clive Barker creates worlds that turn humanity's baser qualities inside out, hold them in front of a funhouse mirror, and transform them into the stuff of nightmares.
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September 21, 2009: This could really scare late elementary readers. There were some very scary parts of the book. It had a nice message about courage.
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August 05, 2009: I will never get tired of saying over and over again that Clive Barker is great! In The Thief of Always, we follow a young boy who is tired of doing things and just does not enjoy himself, and the wrong audience has been watching him. During the night a mysterious, apparently friendly vistor enters the room and offers the little boy a bordem-ridden world of fun. The child agrees to go, "for a short while," and finds that he and his new found friends must fight their way out into the real world once more. Clive Barker does a great job with this as a children's story, and provokes fans to make an "adult link" to his other books (where the little boy would be a grown man and the creatures and the alternate world are hell and demons tricking a soul with their desires). Great fun...recommended read.
I Also Recommend: Hellbound Heart, And Then There Were None.