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Rating: Summary: Ballatine's Mistake. Review: As most Ketchum fans know, The publisher Ballantine originally ruined this book and may have ruined an otherwise very successful carreer. "Off Season", ketchum's first novel is truely horrific, but since even the unexpurgated version isn't the original version , I wonder if somewhere amongst the multiple edits it lost its power to be disturbing? Unlike "Girl Next Door", I wasn't disturbed by this book. It did have it's moments of horror like no other horror novel , but it still seemed to be holding back something. I still wonder if the original that was thrown away by Ketchum was the true "Disturbing" version. Now for the good side. Even though Ketchum doesn't spend many words developing characters, they are always realistic. The reader doesn't always like the characters, just like in real life, where you don't always like most people you meet. But the things that happen to them in this book makes you swallow your dislike and immediatedly feel dread and sorrow for them. The villians on the other hand,, are savages,"literally" But with that said, only about 3 of them are adult men. Some of the rest are made up of and 11 year pregnant girl and even younger children, once again blurring the lines between good and evil. Out of all the gore and horror through-out the book, the end of this version really solidifies it as a dark and depressing novel of which Ketchum is known. I would reccommend this book to other horror fans ,but unlike Ketchum's "Girl Next Door", I don't think it's a must read for everyone.
Rating: Summary: Kill 'em all horror Review: I first read this book (paperback), when it first came out, at the age of 14 (yah, I'm 32 now) and even after not seeing the book since then, I can still recall the author's name and some of the insanely-brutal scenes; it's truly that memorable. To this day it is the only book I have started and finished the same day. Being from Maine, I found the storyline was absolutely feasible due to some of the isolated spots on the coast and what can happen to humanity somehow isolated from society whether by choice or environment. The antagonists are a brutal throwback to primitive man with all the lawlessness of modern man thrown in, resulting in a very nasty mirror image of what lies in all of us (just look at the Central Park attacks recently). This book is like a "Deliverance" family portrait on hypermode.
Rating: Summary: A ruthless, gory read Review: I had been so anxious to read this ever since I heard about it. Finally, I found a library that had it, and read it in only a few days. And I must say, it was gut-wrenching at times. Revolting, even. But, as sick as it was, I never read anything like this before. Carla is a book editor from Manhattan. She heads up to Maine to a cabin for a vacation, and a week later, her boyfriend Jim, sister Marjie, Marjie's boyfriend Dan, her old friend Nick, and Nick's girlfriend Laura join her. That night, a tribe of cannibals attack, and it's an all-out war in one night of bloody terror. I honestly didn't know what I was getting into when I started this, and was shocked. I noticed a mix of three very similar and also very horrifying movies, "Texas Chainsaw Massacre," "Night of the Living Dead," and "The Hills Have Eyes," all of which, from what I read, are inspirations to Ketchum's work. But this still stands out amongst all three of those. Far bloodier. Maybe not scarier, but bloodier. There were some very scary scenes, and the climax is one of the bloodiest I ever read. This unexpurgated edition is great, but if you're like me and never read the book before, don't read the foreword and afterword until you're done with the story, because it reveals plot pieces. I paged through both, and found out some things before I got to those specific scenes I'd prefer not knowing until I got there. In any event, a good book, DEFINITELY not for everyone! I was offended by many different scenes, including an account of a fisherman who saw the cannibals who watched them kicking a dog until it died, then floating it out to sea. I had trouble reading after that. If that little snippet bothered you, I suggest you revise if you really want to read this. Now, what is this sequel, "She Wakes"? I'll go hunting, but if anyone knows, Email me some info.
Rating: Summary: If you have any reservations about buying this book.... Review: I hope I can aleviate some fears for you. I am a woman who thrives on horror. I am also a woman who gets the creeps while reading a novel by an author who appears to be getting his jollies by writing of the graphic sexual abuse or rape of women. I hate it. You can tell when it isn't really part of the story or if the author is using his work to vent frustrations and hostilities of his own. But if it is part of the story, graphic is fine with me. Read a true crime novel. It's graphic because it is human nature. It's in all of us.
Is there graphic sex and violence in this book? Yes, definately. Is it overused, unneccesary, and one-sidedly woman hostile? No. It is all part of a brilliantly woven tapestry of the dark undertow of human nature in it's bleakest form. There was not a gratuitous sex scene on every other page the way some critics have suggested there is. I almost didn't buy this book because I was afraid that horror would give way to smut. I'm glad I bought it. Jack Ketchum is a gifted story teller.
The book was indeed disturbing and not for the squeamish. It was disturbing...but it wasn't..."nasty", for lack of a better word. Women will know what I mean. Just read it. You won't be sorry.
Rating: Summary: Disturbing and I couldn't stop reading it Review: If you are easily shocked or offended then you probably should bypass. If you can keep an open mind, though, this is a great read for those looking for un-campy horror that doesn't pander to its reader. The story involves cannibalism -- enough said. Ketchum has a very direct, pull no punches writing style which adds to the overall effect. After I read this book, I was creeped out for a couple days-- that's the power of this book.
Rating: Summary: Disturbing and I couldn't stop reading it Review: It is off-season in an old cabin in the small town of Dead River, Maine. In that old cabin, there are six out of towners from New York. One is there to finish the last edit on a book. The other five are there for a relaxing week of vacation. However, there's seventeen other "people" who have different plans for them. What those plans are, are revealed in one of the most gruesome experiences you'll ever read. For those six people, it very quickly turns into an evening of death, despair and hopelessness. This is Jack Ketchum's first book, and one of, if not his best. Ketchum takes you on a wild ride that assaults you at every turn and then runs you straight into a brick wall. Outside of the opening chapters of the book, part I and part II can read a little slow. However, the reader will find these two parts are necessary and a well-planned lead into part III. Ketchum sets you up, pulls the rug out from underneath you, and then gives you the knock out punch. Within a story that is well laid out, there are scenes of graphic events. Be forewarned that some of these are extremely descriptive and brutal in nature. There's enough blood, guts, gore, and death to fill several books. If tamer scenes from writers like Clive Barker and Stephen King bother you, then this book is NOT for you. If you like writers like Edward Lee and Lucy Taylor, and you like Ketchum's other works, then this book IS for you. If you read the unexpurgated version, do not read the introduction or afterword until you've finished the book. There are passages in both of these that will give away parts of the book. What amazes me is that there once was more to this book. Ketchum explains that this was the version to be published after the first major editing session. He tossed his original manuscript after that edit, so the story in it's entirely is forever lost. The first mass mark publication was edited even more that what you will read in the Unexpurgated version.
Rating: Summary: Better than Girl Next Door Review: The first Ketchum novel I read was "The Girl Next Door". Based on the reviews, it sounded like that book was going to really pack a punch. Although many of the scenes in the book were brutal, I just never found myself completely buying into the story -- the events were just too extreme to be believable. Although Girl Next Door didn't click for me, I liked Kethum's writing style, so I tried out "Off Season". The story in "Off Season" is pretty bizarre, as well, but I found it to be much more fun to read. This was one of Ketchum's first novels, which you can tell from his somewhat clumsy writing style (Girl Next Door was much more polished). However, despite some gratuitous violence and sex, I found "Off Season" to be quite entertaining. The story really moves along and the action just keeps coming. Ketchum tells his stories the way you want -- without holding back anything. Most people will probably find some of the scenes in this book a little disgusting. But, if you can get over that, I think you will enjoy Kethcum's "no holds barred" style. If you enjoy the horror genre, give "Off Season" a try.
Rating: Summary: The epitomy of a cult classic Review: Wow, this has it all. Suspense, sex, cannibalism and gore. But this should definitely not be dismissed as mere splatterpunk garbage. The writing is excellent, as is the character development. The gist of the story revolves around 3 men and 3 women who, while on a vacation in the woods of Maine, are forced to lock themselves up in their cabin and fend off flesh-eating subhuman cavepeople. Think "Night of the living Dead" taken to an extreme and with a much faster pace. Even if it grosses you out, one thing Offseason is guaranteed not to do is fail to entertain. A must.
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