(Mass Market Paperback)
A school for special children. An unsolved murder. A terrified widow. A dream of blood and lost souls. A stranger with an unspeakable secret. It all comes together in the afterlife.
Stoker-winner Clegg (The Hour Before Dark) has an uncanny ability to frighten readers by chronicling everyday characters' perilous descents into their own private hells. Julie Hutchinson mentally unravels after the brutal and mysterious murder of her husband, Jeff, in this stand-alone tale full of subtle suspense, inventive twists and credible characters. Julie has erotic nightmares and hideous hallucinations while slowly trying to piece together the decades-old puzzle involving her husband's past work with Project Daylight, a now-defunct privately funded school that conducted experiments on young children with ESP. Eventually, with the assistance of her mother, daughter and stepson, as well as Jeff's ex-wife and Michael Diamond, a popular TV psychic, Julie unearths bizarre secrets about her family that lead her to an underground society of scientific misfits. The book's final sentence is guaranteed to unnerve readers and leave them wanting more. A concise writer, Clegg manages to weave into his plot such grand ideas as reincarnation and psychic phenomena in a mere 272 pages. Many other writers would have taken twice as long to tell a tale half as captivating. Agent, Simon Lipskar. (Dec.) FYI: Clegg has recently sold a vampire trilogy, The Vampyricon, to Berkley/Ace for six figures. The first volume, The Priest of Blood, is scheduled for October 2005. Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
More Reviews and RecommendationsReader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
August 05, 2007: I picked this book up on a whim one day and I have to say that to me this was one of those books that got to me so much that I felt like I couldn't read another book again. I just couldn't get this book out of my head. I was hooked. I definately recommend this book to those who can dedicate alot of time to reading because you will not be able to put this one down.
Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings
July 24, 2006: It's obviously me. However, I didn't like the ending. I loved the book up until the last thirty pages or so. It got weird and confusing. Not really confusing as much as weird. I hate books that seem so 'far' out their that I can't wrap my mind around them. Again, maybe I'm lacking a brain, since I didn't find it as great as everyone else!