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Mass Market Paperback Dark of the Eye: Dark of the Eye Book

ISBN: 067173539X

ISBN13: 9780671735395

Dark of the Eye: Dark of the Eye

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Format: Mass Market Paperback

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Book Overview

Will they stop her - or will she stop them?A mother and daughter on the run fall prey to a monstrous hunt in this heart-pounding supernatural horror novel. A tragic accident leaves young Hope Stewart... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

3 ratings

Good early novel from Clegg

After reading author Douglas Clegg's Bram Stoker Award-winning short story collection The Nightmare Chronicles, I was eager to read a novel by him. But where to start? As luck sometimes has it, that decision was made for me. In the interest of keeping up with news about Clegg, I signed up for his email newsletter and found that Dark of the Eye was being serialized within its pages. Not the most ideal circumstances in which to read a novel, I'll admit -- I'm one of the old-fashioned type that still likes to turn pages -- but it is also an idea whose time has come. It's merely an updating of the old Dickensian model of magazine serialization -- and he was, by most accounts, a rousing success. Even now, authors are catching on to the concept that the best way to promote their work is by giving something away for free. It keeps us coming back and, therefore, keeps their names fresh in our minds for when we go book shopping. Dark of the Eye, first published in 1994, is now out of print but still available from online booksellers. Still, it's fairly rare, which makes it the perfect candidate for this sort of promotion; it is a really good book that isn't easily available anywhere else. It almost makes it seem like a sort of discovery! In it, we're dropped right in the middle of an ongoing story as a one-eyed girl named Hope Stewart gains an awesome healing power that some people -- like her father, the mysterious Dr. Robert Stewart -- want to preserve, while others -- like Special Projects' Stephen Grace (aka "Shadow"), a government assassin -- want to destroy. Hope's mother, Kate, however, doesn't trust Robert and runs away with Hope, straight into the middle of Empire, California, a former boomtown that now seems only to serve as the residence for a motley crew of supporting characters -- including the strange "family" that goes by the name of Cthonos. A relatively early novel in the Clegg bibliography, Dark of the Eye does not exhibit signs of the author's later confidence in his abilities, but does showcase his seemingly intuitive knowledge of when something works. The beginning is a little confusing because while we're trying to learn about the characters, they're taking off somewhere else. It's like a chase trying to get to know them. After the fast-paced exposition, the story takes time getting to where it's going though the pace never lets up. Once the climax is set in motion, however, the surprises come fast and furious as the novel barrels to its conclusion. (I carried the printed pages with me so as not to miss a opportunity to read it.) It ends somewhat abruptly, but is suspenseful and engrossing the entire time. The characters are absolutely fascinating and Clegg fills this book with enough idiosyncracies to fill a series of novels and a circus freak show. Based on the evidence of Dark of the Eye in addition to The Nightmare Chronicles, Douglas Clegg is now on my Favorite Authors list.

Douglas Clegg is brilliant

Apparently I am not alone in just discovering this amazing talent. I had heard that Clegg wrote novels like King, and I wasn't sure this was a good thing (although Stephen King is still an amazing writer, I wasn't sure if someone "like" him would be very good). Douglas Clegg is a blazingly original talent, and to confuse his work too much with King is to miss out on truly enjoyable fiction. I found both The Children's Hour and Dark of the Eye to be remarkable in their level of character development and Clegg's literate style of writing. Then I found second-hand copies of his first novel, Goat Dance, as well as his third, Neverland. Both of these should be classics of the genre, except that the critics of this particular genre tend to be moribund and bitter, and I suspect much of the horror audience is made up of people who have never heard of Shirley Jackson but know all the films of Wes Craven. The fact that Clegg's publishers have all but buried these novels shows the blindness of publishing. If anyone can locate a copy of his second novel Breeder, drop me a note.James Falmouth

Gruesome psychological terror

This is a fast-paced horror novel a little like King's Fire Starter, in the sense that the 11 year old heroine has extraordinary powers, but there are plenty of plot twists to make this a truly original work. After I read this-in one sitting-I went to a local bookstore to search out other Doug Clegg titles. I found Children's Hour and Bad Karma, (this last under a psuedonym) but the other titles were out of stock. Hey Dell Publishing, Doug Clegg or who ever is out there who might know-where can I find the other paperbacks, because this is a great author-the kind who delivers taut, original horror of an intelligent sort.
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