Publisher: Tor Books
Published: September 2007
176 pgs
The year is 1963 in a small Midwestern town setting. Everyone in that town knew about the October Boy (otherwise known as Ol' Hacksaw Face, or Sawtooth Jack). Every year towards Halloween, he will rise from the cornfields and make his way towards town with his tattered jacket full of candies.
How this ritual comes about will be explained in the story, but I am not going to spoil it for you. So every Halloween, the October Boy will resurrect and with a butcher knife in hand, he will make his way to town and towards the church before a boy gets him. That is the rule and this is how it always played.
Dark Harvest is the winner of the Bram Stoker Award in 2006 and also listed as Publishers Weekly’s 100 Best Books of 2006. I have to say these honours are well-deserved as Dark Harvest is one of the most extraordinary horror stories I have ever read. The Halloween theme may sound old to some, but the bonus is the author delivered it with a different premise with a twist as one would have to figure out who is the real evil behind this story. The writing is beautiful with a lyrical and poetic prose to it; I know this may sound a little strange but I think it works very well through Norman Partridge's skillful writing. One would also think of the humanity issue on top of all the dark elements, which I think entitles another point for this well-written horror tale. The only down side is I wish this story is a bit longer.
I am glad I picked up this book right after reading Carl's lovely review some time back. What's more, it is hard to turn down a book like this with that attractive, eye-catching cover.
Other blog review:
Stainless Steel Droppings
(Let me know if I have missed yours.)
Wow, this one looks good. You've been adding to my wishlist this week, Melody. :)
Yup, it certainly is a very attractive cover. I am in a mood for spooky, i'll surely look it up. Thanks for the review Melody.
Amy - It sure is! I'm glad to hear that the books I read lately are adding to your list, Amy. :)
Violet - That's great! I hope you'll enjoy it if you get to it.
You are right, that cover is marvelous. I am also fascinated with the premise. What would you recommend on the age range? I might read it for my 9 and 10 year old when it gets closer to Halloween...
This one sounds good... and I like that cover!
Love stories like this and this sounds so neat! I'm going to wait and read this around Halloween though.
I was intrigued by this one when you posted the teaser and now it's definitely going on my list. Wonderful review, Melody!
I want to read this for the next RIP challenge. I'm glad you enjoyed it so much, Melody!
Sandy - I'd say this book is suitable from age 12 onwards, but that's only my opinion though.
Alice - The cover is awesome, isn't it?!
Jen - This will make a good Halloween read, but I suppose I can't wait, LOL.
Iliana - Thanks, Iliana! I'm glad to hear you're adding this to your list. :)
Nymeth - Yes, it's fit for the RIP challenge! Hopefully Carl will host it sooner, hehe.
That is one creepy cover. That alone has me wanting to read this book! Sounds good, too. :)
Yes the cover is grat. This sounds really intereesting and somehow reminds me of an episode of Supernatural when there is a scarecrow that comes to life each year.