In this most gothic of
Robert McCammon's novels, setting is key: the continuing saga of the
Usher family (descended from the brother of Roderick and Madeline of
Edgar Poe's "Fall of the House of Usher") takes place in the weird and
picturesque heart of the North Carolina mountains.
The haughty,
aristocratic Ushers live in a mansion near Asheville; the poor but
crafty mountain folk (whose families are just as ancient) live on
Briartop Mountain nearby. At harvest time, when the book's action
unfolds, the mountains are a blaze of color.
Add to the mixture a
sinister history of mountain kids disappearing every year, a journalist
investigating those disappearances, a monster called "The Pumpkin Man,"
moldy books and paintings in a huge old library at the Usher estate, and
a secret chamber with a strange device involving a brass pendulum and
tuning forks--and you've got a splendid recipe for atmospheric horror.
Originally published: New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1984.
ID: TH - 843
TH - 843 - Usher's Passing by Robert R. McCammon
- Grupa:
IDENTIFIKACIONI (ID) BROJEVI:
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SC:
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301-400__401-500__501-600
601-700__701-800__801-900
901-1000__1001-1100__1101-1200
1201-1300__1301-1400__1401-1500
1501-1600__1601-1700__1701-1800
1801-1900__1901-2000
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