"Powerful gothic horror"
Fifteen year old Angel Sullivan has no friends and is
tormented by her peers. Her father drinks too much and
has been fired from so many construction jobs nobody in
town who will hire him. Marty's wife Myra loses herself
in religion as a way of coping with her unhappy home
life. When her sister Joni calls and informs her there is
a perfect home that they can afford in Roundtree,
Massachusetts, they buy it because Myra's brother-in-law
gives Marty a job. Angel loves her new home on Black Creek Crossing and
believes she will make new friends at school but instead
the students start tormenting her. The only person who
befriends her is Seth Baker a pariah like Angel. Both
teens notice inexplicable happenings in the house and a
black cat with a definite agenda. He leads them to a
place on the basement stairs where a book is found in a
hidden panel and then he makes them follow him to a
camouflaged cabin in the woods. There they open the book
and what they find between the pages allows them to
finally get revenge on their enemies. Drawing on the Salem Witch trials and the folklore on
haunted houses, John Saul creates a tale so vividly
chilling and horrifying that readers will want to sleep
with the lights on. BLACK CREEK CROSSING is not the
typical haunted house story nor is it a modern day
retailing of the Salem witches but an amalgam of the two.
The protagonists draw reader sympathy from the very
beginning which is why the ending is such a shock. Mr.
Saul has written another gothic horror novel that is
unforgettable. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted February 10, 2004
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