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Post by dem bones on May 30, 2008 6:38:33 GMT
Post by Nightreader from Vault Mk. 1 Hugh C. Rae - The Haunting At Waverley Falls (NEL 1980) Sometimes books are really frustrating. This is one of them. After a long and difficult start this turned out to be...OK. Initially I disliked this a lot, wasn't even sure if I'd finish it but decided to persevere. I'm glad I did. This isn't a bad book by any means, but it's got plenty wrong with it too. The story involves the coal miners of small Pittsburgh town called Waverley Falls, where the mining company imports workers and support crews until the mine is stripped, then the whole operation moves on. When some miners die in an accident underground the workers link their deaths to some 'roachbacks' camping nearby. Roachbacks are itinerant travellers, kind of new-age hippie types, with a leader called Foxy Boy who claims he can heal the sick. Some of the miners from the town confront the roachbacks, eventually murdering them all. Observing all this, but not intervening, is Sheriff Badillo, head of security for the mining company (though not a true law enforcer beyond the company grounds). He is disturbed by what happened, knew it was wrong and feels guilty for not preventing it. Then the haunting begins in earnest, with a freak wind storm, a suicide, a miner driven insane at the coal face plus other deaths, all of them the men who took part in the roachback killings. The Sheriff knows he has to find out what is going on and a way of stopping it before he too dies or goes mad... Like I've said, this is not a bad book. It does start very slowly, and the first pages seemed like hard work to me. I wasn't gripped as I normally would hope to be at the start of a story. The tale builds reasonable well once it does actually get going, and the supernatural bits are entertaining. Except I found the characters pretty unappealing, all quite dull, depressed, cynical, ignorant and prejudiced. To be fair the Sheriff does become more likable and assumes the hero role well enough. The setting is industrial America, the America of coal and steel and haulage. It feels a bit gloomy and shabby, but maybe that's just realism. In my opinion another problem with this book is that of padding - lots of lengthy explanations and descriptions that don't move the story along. This could easily lose 100 pages and not suffer from it. Less usually is more. I didn't really enjoy this book, but I can't completely figure out why. There doesn't seem to be any enjoyment in the writing, perhaps thats it. You can tell with some writers they've had a damn good time telling the story, that they were excited by it themselves. To me that's what is really lacking here, real enthusiasm from the writer. Or maybe I'm just talking rubbish. I certainly don't want to put anyone off reading this, just the opposite. I would love to hear what someone else thinks of this... ********** [/color] demonik "Horny nails tore through the roof as though it was parchment. The hand wormed, groped and wriggled through the widening crack. Wrist, forearm, elbow and shoulder twisted and strained. The bones were draped in rotting green flesh like Spanish moss, striped with putrid flesh that pealed off mealy gouts on the edges of the crack" It's not all as exciting as this quote on the back cover would have you believe, but I'm half-way through now and really haven't found it that slow going. The brutal murder of the roachbacks occurs fairly early in the proceedings and, although there's a long wait until their ghosts begin to avenge themselves, the deaths are imaginative and the scene where the rapidly decomposing corpse army appear to be smashing their way through the roof of the mine is deliciously creepy. Badillo, originally as obnoxious a character as the mob who brutally slay Foxy and his entirely harmless friends, at least manages to cut short the sexual assault of a young girl by coal-hauler and rapist Buddy Rice - without him, as nightreader points out, you'd not really have one character to root for. The 'hunkies' certainly don't give a s**t for their deceased colleagues and only attack the transients for sport because they know they'll get away with it. Being thoroughly biased, I would have preferred an English industrial setting, but so far I've enjoyed it and with at least two of the worst offenders on the night of the 'roach massacre still at large, there are doubtless some more grisly moments to look forward to. Later .... Finally finished this and have come to appreciate fully what a fine job nightreader did on this. It didn't really drag for me until maybe halfway through when I got really bogged down and wished he'd cut the cackle and get on with it. For me, it's the dialogue that drags; there's plenty of conversation which, while not exactly superfluous, does seem to be prolonged beyond any great necessity. The male characters - Badillo apart - are a dis-likable bunch (notably the suits and Badillo's conniving, murderous deputy, Jevons), quick with their fists when they can't have their way and ever seeking scapegoats. By contrast all the women are sympathetic to the point of Sainthood. I enjoyed it in fits and starts, certainly glad not to have given up on it for something less taxing, but I doubt I'll read it again. Rae writes under many different pseudonyms - crime, mystery, S.A.S.and even romantic novels - and, from what I can make out, this is his only straight horror outing. There's a neat thumbnail biog/ biblio/ interview with him at: dazaland : Hugh C. Rae:
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