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Original Title: Off Season
ISBN: 0843956968 (ISBN13: 9780843956962)
Edition Language: English
Series: Dead River
Series: #1
Setting: Maine(United States)
Literary Awards: Prix Masterton for Roman traduit (2009)
Books Off Season (Dead River Series #1) Online Free Download
Off Season (Dead River Series #1) Mass Market Paperback | Pages: 308 pages
Rating: 3.83 | 9223 Users | 792 Reviews

Description During Books Off Season (Dead River Series #1)

September. A beautiful New York editor retreats to a lonely cabin on a hill in the quiet Maine beach town of Dead River—off season—awaiting her sister and friends. Nearby, a savage human family with a taste for flesh lurks in the darkening woods, watching, waiting for the moon to rise and night to fall... And before too many hours pass, five civilized, sophisticated people and one tired old country sheriff will learn just how primitive we all are beneath the surface...and that there are no limits at all to the will to survive.

Itemize About Books Off Season (Dead River Series #1)

Title:Off Season (Dead River Series #1)
Author:Jack Ketchum
Book Format:Mass Market Paperback
Book Edition:Anniversary Edition
Pages:Pages: 308 pages
Published:June 2006 by Dorchester (first published 1980)
Categories:Horror. Fiction. Thriller. Splatterpunk

Rating About Books Off Season (Dead River Series #1)
Ratings: 3.83 From 9223 Users | 792 Reviews

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CANNIBALISM: A MORE BALANCED PERSPECTIVE While I really liked this book, I feel compelled to make a few introductory remarks before I discuss the specific merits of the story. I will give Mr. Ketchum the benefit of the doubt and say that I do not believe it was his intention in writing this book to come across as a snobby, elitist, anti cannibal bigot. However, the fact remains that this novel is yet another example of popular media perpetrating the negative stereotype of cannibalism. I feel

Oh my god what a disturbing book. There were moments when I dreaded to continue reading it because I just knew that things would go horribly fucked up with a lot of gore. And it did. This is not the kind of books I usually read and I honestly dont know if I want to read more of its kind. Not that the book was bad, it was good, just a bit too disgusting for my taste I must admit. I prefer paranormal horror that makes you wonder if you should check under the bed and the closet before you sleep not

I can see why this book was a bit of a game changer in 1980. I'm glad I got to read it in the format intended by the author (albeit still not the original manuscript, which no longer exists) instead of the cleaned-up version. Warning: It is graphic and even this seasoned reader of horror novels winced several times! Some "gross" books have zero story line and bore me to tears. This one had a simple plot, but it was still engaging because the characters...even the CRAZY cannibals...were

For the last 25 years, I have told anybody who would listen that IT by Stephen King is the best horror novel ever written. Right now, Im not so sure anymore. This book simply blew my mind.I was fortunate enough to read the authors uncut, uncensored version. Even though this book was first published in 1980 thats right, 38 years ago Ive never had the opportunity to read that version. After reading the Afterword, it might have been a blessing. I dont know if that particular ending would have sat

One does not read Jack Ketchum to be entertained. So why would someone pick up a Ketchum book? I haven't a fucking clue. Like the late, great Richard Laymon, Jack Ketchum is a diabolical motherfucker. He knows how to make skin crawl and stomachs turn. Each one of his books is the literary equivalent of a snuff film. They're real. They're in your face. They're sick and completely immoral. And I can't stop reading them. I don't know what that says about me and other Ketchum fans, but it's the

So I had high expectations going when I opened this book up and began to read. I have read only one other Ketchum book entitled The Crossings. That one was a western that would have been great as a Sam Peckinpah movie. I can't believe I never got wind of Ketchum until recently, as he has been writing since the early eighties if not longer.I'm happy I discovered Ketchum. He is a writer with no apologies regarding the extreme and often stomach turning violence within his novels. This was his first

CANNIBALISM: A MORE BALANCED PERSPECTIVE While I really liked this book, I feel compelled to make a few introductory remarks before I discuss the specific merits of the story. I will give Mr. Ketchum the benefit of the doubt and say that I do not believe it was his intention in writing this book to come across as a snobby, elitist, anti cannibal bigot. However, the fact remains that this novel is yet another example of popular media perpetrating the negative stereotype of cannibalism. I feel

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