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Phantom Nights

Phantom Nights

The year is 1952. Fourteen-year-old Alex Gambier is rebellious by nature and scarred by childhood tragedy in the southern community of Evening Shade. An outcast in his own family, mute from a bout with diptheria at an early age, Alex expresses himself by writing imaginative stories and by conceiving daredevil stunts that test all of his physical rescources while putting his life in extreme danger.The aftermath of one of his hair-raising stunts finds Alex in the care of a young black nurse named Mally Shaw. An unlikely friendship results, which is ended by an unspeakable crime that costs Mally her life.Or not quite ended, for Mally finds herself trapped in a nether world by the force of Alex's will and his need to exact a terrifying revenge on the man responsible for Mally's death.But the revenge he seeks is a two-edged sword, the price Alex's own soul as he recklessly pursues his quarry in a chilling double twist climax that surpasses anything John Farris has written before.

From Publishers Weekly

Farris takes a break from the paranormal pyrotechnics of his Fury series (The Fury, etc.) with this well-wrought period tale of vengeance from beyond the grave. It's 1952 in the sultry Tennessee town of Night Shade, and black nurse Mally Shaw has just heard her white patient, Priest Howard, use his dying breath to accuse his slimy son, Leland, of being a thief. Soon thereafter, Leland, who assumes (correctly) that his daddy has entrusted Mally with criminal evidence that could sink his budding political career, abducts Mally to his home, where he rapes and kills her and then covers up the evidence to make her death look accidental. Only days before, though, good-hearted Mally had shown kindness to Alex Gambier, an emotionally troubled mute boy whose brother is the town's deputy sheriff, and her psychic rapport with Alex persists after death. This is a more streamlined story than Farris's usual supernatural extravaganzas, but the plot still has ample room to twist and turn around the complications of Alex's inability to speak and Mally's second-class citizenship in a racially divided town. Solidly developed characters and an authentic sense of period and place contribute to the story's impact, as does the unusual blend of tenderness and grue. Farris remains one of the most effectively surprising horror writers of his generation. (Feb. 15) Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Several usually unassociated natives of little Evening Shade, Tennessee, fatefully cross paths one pressure-cooking August 1952 weekend. After his banker father's funeral, U.S. Senate candidate Leland Howard decides to wind down with pretty Mally Shaw, his father's nurse at the end, and winds up raping and killing her. Mute 14-year-old Alex Gambier, whom Mally had befriended after cleaning him up in the wake of a death-defying prank, is a hidden witness, as he lets his brother Bobby, the town's acting sheriff, know. But going after Leland is a major career risk, and Bobby has to be prodded into deeply investigating by Mally's long-estranged father, a pathologist who quickly gathers evidence that shames Bobby into action. Only Alex knows that the justice seekers have a crucial ally--Mally's ghost, whom Alex has kept from fully passing away by the force of his need for trust and revenge. With engaging characters and deft evocation of early 1950s racism, Farris makes a routine, mildly supernaturalized rural police procedural rather better than it could have been. Ray OlsonCopyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Publishers Weekly on Phantom Nights

“[An] unusual blend of tenderness and grue. Farris remains one of the most effectively surprising horror writers of his generation.”

Kirkus Reviews (starred review) on Phantom Nights

“Perhaps Farris’s best yet . . . Strong, lip-smacking suspense with an occult overwash.”

Fangoria on Phantom Nights

“Well-drawn characters move swiftly together in a complex, yet neatly laid out series of events. . . . Farris’s graceful and gripping storytelling style is what’s important here. Phantom Nights is another winner from a legendary writer.”

From AudioFile

In 1952 the ghost of a murdered nurse guides the mute boy who witnessed her death in bringing her killer to justice in rural Tennessee. This combination procedural and horror story unfolds with wit, vivid characterization, plenty of suspense, and, for a page-turner, a surprisingly graceful narrative style. One would expect the reader of such fare to adopt a low, sardonic, lugubrious baritone. But this recording gives us something unexpected and much more enjoyable. Joey Collins has a boyish voice and a Dionysian style. Mischief invests his every intonation; he is having so much exuberant fun that the listener becomes energized and delighted despite the book's more chilling moments. Yet he is never out of control, never giving too much. All in all, this is a rare and happy combination of excellent writing, quirky casting, and joyful performance. Y.R. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2006, Portland, Maine-- Copyright © AudioFile, Portland, Maine

About the Author

JOHN FARRIS is the 2002 Horror Writers' Association Lifetime Achievement Award winner and the author of numerous New York Times bestsellers including, The Fury, When Michael Calls, and Soon She Will Be Gone. He lives in Atlanta, Georgia.

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