The Halloween Man walks when the screaming begins, and only Stony Crawford holds the key to the power of the chilling mystery of Stonehaven—and to the power of the unspeakable creature trapped within a summer mansion.…
The Halloween Man walks when the screaming begins, and only Stony Crawford holds the key to the power of the chilling mystery of Stonehaven—and to the power of the unspeakable creature trapped within a summer mansion.…
The Halloween Man
The Halloween Man
Overview
The Halloween Man walks when the screaming begins, and only Stony Crawford holds the key to the power of the chilling mystery of Stonehaven—and to the power of the unspeakable creature trapped within a summer mansion.…
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9781511320573 |
---|---|
Publisher: | Brilliance Audio |
Publication date: | 06/21/2016 |
Edition description: | Unabridged |
Product dimensions: | 5.30(w) x 6.70(h) x 0.40(d) |
About the Author
Read an Excerpt
Prologue from The Halloween Man by Douglas Clegg
The shattering of glass and metal, as some unseen intruder broke the window, did not wake him.
A voice in his head whispered, "Your soul."
The boy shivered. The rain outside, and the wind that blew across the near-desolate room, across the old woman's face as she too lay back in some dream, he knew this but none of it could draw him up from sleep; the crunch and squeal of a door opening, of glass being stepped upon, all of this played at the edge of his consciousness, but he could not tug away from the dream that had grabbed him.
The voice whispered, "Your heart."
His eyelids fluttered open for a moment, and then the boy closed them again, as if the real world were the dream, and his inner world, the truth.
Even the mindpain was only a shredded curtain, blowing against a window of the dream.
The boy dreamed on. His inner eyes opened onto the other world, the one of insane geometries, of orange lightning, of fire that rained from trees like leaves falling, of the birds rising from the water their impossibly pure white wings spreading across the burning sky. As the sky filled with bloody swans, he saw the dark ram with its golden eyes shining as it galloped towards him across the surface of the unbroken water. Then the eels wriggling across the glassy surface, turning the brown water red with their wakes. The ram rode across their backs, its hooves beating like knives on stones. The Azriel Light came up from its breath, forming crystalline in the mist of air, and then burned across the world. What was unspeakable found voice and its bleating froze the air for a moment hacked from the fabric of time as the secret of all stabbed at his ears.
Someone tried to wake him from it. The mindpain came back like a bolt of lightning, burning along his neural pathways. The boy's eyes opened, his dream torn apart.
The man shook him awake and held a hand over his mouth. The room came back with its shadows of curtains and half-opened cupboards. The trill of a mockingbird outside the window. The shroud of dawn. The room that always seemed too small for all of them. The others slept on around him.
The man wore a dark leather jacket and jeans, his dark hair in need of a cut, and the smell from him was almost sweet -- like sage on the desert after a rain.
"You Satan?" the boy asked in a hushed tone of reverence. Fear was not there. He didn't sense it. He didn't feel it from the man, and it wasn't within him. He knew, somehow, the man would be there. He knew just as he knew that his dream had foretold something.
"I could be," the man whispered, his breath all cigarettes, "If you keep quiet, you'll live. Understand?"
The boy nodded. The mindpain blossomed against his small skull. When it came on, as it usually did after one of the Great Meetings, it would blast within his head like the worst headache. Sometimes his nose would bleed from it. Sometimes he'd go into convulsions. He never knew how hard it would hit, he just knew it was PAIN. He knew it HURT. The mindpain didn't let go until it was good and ready to.
The boy felt something pressed against his side.
Cold metal.
"That's right," the man whispered. "It's a gun. I will kill you if you make a noise or try to fight me. Or if you try to do what I know you can do."
The boy began shivering, and wasn't sure if he could will himself to stop. He wanted to be back in his dream. It felt like ants were crawling all over his arms and legs. Ants stinging him all over, and then tickling along his neck. He wanted to swat and scratch, but he was afraid the man might use the gun. The boy had seen a jack rabbit get shot clean in half once. He didn't need to imagine it happening to himself.
But the markings on him, the drawings...
He knew they were moving, the pictures on his shoulders. He wished he could scrape them from his flesh. He wanted to tell the stranger with the gun about them, about how they meant bad things when they began moving, but the boy knew this would do no good.
The man grinned as he lifted the boy up, wrapping a shabby blanket around him. The boy's last view of what he had come to call home was the old woman lying there staring at him. Blood sluiced from between her lips, and tears bled down in rivulets from her eyes. The mattress beneath her was soaked red. Her fingers were still curled around a small amulet she kept with her, nothing more than a locket, a good luck charm.
The boy was too tired to fight, and weakened, too, by the previous day's performance. Mindpain always came after the show. Mindpain was like what the Great Father had called a hangover. It was the morning after. That was a problem for him, it sapped him of strength, and even when he had tried to kick out at the man, he could barely move his legs.
The man would probably kill him. The boy knew this is what kidnappers usually did. He had watched late night TV shows like "America's Most Wanted" and knew that kidnappers rarely kept a kid alive.
The boy tried not to think of the gun.
Tried to remember the Great Father holding his arms out, his hands open to him. "I will be your comfort in the valley of the shadow," the Great Father had said.
This was the valley of the shadow of death. This kidnapper and his gun and his blanket and the red stain on the mattress with the old woman's mouth wide open.
Thinking about it, the boy winced. The hammering in his head grew stronger. Everything hurt.
The pounding of the rain on the roof seemed unbearable. It was a terrible rain, it had come at first as ice and then tiny pebbles hitting the corrugated tin roof, until finally, it was just water. God is pissin' on us on accounta our sins, that's what the old woman who took care of him would say, her Texas twang increasing with her years. She was dead now. She was in whatever Great Beyond existed, the boy knew. She was in the pictures that covered him now, as were all things that were no more. If the mindpain hadn't descended that night, weakening him further, he might've been able to struggle against this evil man who took him. Even though the blanket covered the boy's ears, it was as if the hoofbeats of wild horses were beating down upon him from heaven.
The kidnapper threw him into the backseat of a car. Slammed the door. As they drove off, the boy glanced back at the place he'd called home and knew in his heart he would never see it again. Dawn was just bursting from the far horizon. Rain accompanied it, the first fresh drops hitting the car windows, dirt rinsing down. The pain in the boy's head grew, and he could feel the tingling begin along his back and shoulders. He knew that whatever was supposed to start, all the things that he'd been warned about by the Great Father, would come to pass now.
Through him, the radiance would come, like electricity through the idiot wires of the gods.
His skin felt molten.
--From The Halloween Man, by Douglas Clegg. © October 1998 , Douglas Clegg, used by permission.
Interviews
On Wednesday, June 9th, barnesandnoble.com welcomed Douglas Clegg to discuss THE HALLOWEEN MAN and NAOMI.
Moderator: Welcome, Douglas Clegg! Thank you for taking the time to join us online this evening. How are you doing tonight?
Douglas Clegg: I'm feeling great! After the chat, I'm going to watch the first Austin Powers movie on video -- for the third time. What more can you ask for on a Wednesday night? But because I'm a horror novelist, it will seem...evil...
Matt from NYC: With all the fuss about kids and violence, are you concerned you could come under fire for NAOMI and offering a free horror novel for anyone with an email address who requests it?
Douglas Clegg: Kids and violence? Do they go together? Well, NAOMI is a ghost story crossed with a romantic tale crossed with a dark fantasy -- and is fairly nonviolent toward kids. But if kids really want to fall in love and then try to find the loves of their lives after reading NAOMI, why, I'm all prepared to take responsibility for that. Douglas Clegg: I love having a book in front of me. I love it when a storyteller tells me a tale. I love when I see a movie. And I really enjoy reading on my Rocket eBook (I'm reading DAISY MILLER by Henry James right now). And I love reading cybernovels. So here's what I worry about more than anything: Is my story, NAOMI, or my collection of short stories like THE NIGHTMARE CHRONICLES or my novel THE HALLOWEEN MAN -- are they entertaining? Absorbing? Regardless of what format they're in, I want to involve people in my fictions. And I'm having more fun with NAOMI than I thought I would. Douglas Clegg: Bonnie -- I never say never, but truth is, each character lives in his or her own world for me -- and the world of THE HALLOWEEN MAN had a certain closure. Although, I guess if I came up with a strong enough story to entertain myself in the writing, I could do a sequel taking up at the moment THE HALLOWEEN MAN ends...who knows? Thanks also, Bonnie, for coming along on the NAOMI trip! Douglas Clegg: Brian -- I'm not a publisher, but I'd guess you could approach various places like Hardshell Word Factory or the other online publishers -- or you could publish it yourself on a web site. It depends on your goals. Writing fiction for me is about storytelling and about expressing all the worlds I can dream up. I've discovered that any way these stories can reach readers, I'll probably try. I would suggest that if you believe in your story, you decide where your ideal readers are for it -- and then get your novel where they can find it. Good luck! Douglas Clegg: Mark -- thanks for asking. I had wanted to write this novel for a few years (I guess since about '91 or so). I never had the time. Well, I have three books coming out in the next two years, and I thought: I really want to write NAOMI, but where will it appear? My publicist suggested doing something in email, and ta-da -- I went with it. I will publish the novel as an offline novel one day, but right now I'm not going to worry about that. I'm just going to focus on giving the subscribers to NAOMI a unique experience: a book that I'm writing week by week, creating as strong a story as I can. Douglas Clegg: Gary -- I wish I had a million readers like you. Thanks. My first novel, GOAT DANCE, is still high on my list because I had to really dig in and explore what storytelling was with that one; my third novel, NEVERLAND, is my personal favorite because I put so much of my childhood in it, encoded in fiction. But they're all my kids: I even love the one with the warts and the hacking cough that can't quite spell right. Tough to choose. Douglas Clegg: Curious -- no, NAOMI will pretty much not be an endless saga. This is a novel that will probably reach between 350 and 400 pages in book form were it to be published. I won't make it the dreaded never-ending tale. But I probably will present email novels or short stories over the Internet in the future -- I find the form really different and very much a challenge. Douglas Clegg: Fred -- yes, and actually there are lots of novels on the Web -- by exciting new writers. I just am hoping a top bestselling novelist does this, too. I think it's a great way to get more in touch with readers -- who are, in many ways, coauthors, because they use their imaginations to re-create the novel. Douglas Clegg: Dee -- I wish! I'd love to, but given my current schedule, I would not know when to plan this. However, a good friend is moving to Wisconsin shortly, novelist Beth Amos (SECOND SIGHT is her recent novel), and my friend Brian Rieselman lives there, too. So if I go visit them in the next 12 months, maybe I can swing by Milwaukee. Douglas Clegg: Don -- actually, I'm creating more of a discipline for myself with NAOMI -- and enjoying it more than I ever thought was possible. I probably will try to use this same discipline when writing future novels -- that is, learn to focus more on story and not go off on tangents that don't serve the tale. But other than that, it's a very similar experience to writing my other novels -- I just get to fail or succeed with it in front of people every single week. Thanks for asking. Douglas Clegg: Randy -- hey! Long time no e! NIGHTMARE CHRONICLES is a collection of short stories linked by the story of a kidnapping and its consequences. One of my favorite books as a kid was THE MARTIAN CHRONICLES by Ray Bradbury -- and I wanted to do for nightmares what he did for Mars and its inhabitants -- tell short stories within the framework of a larger theme. I sort of discovered that many of my short stories were about horrific or wondrous transformations and that they really work together to create almost a novel via short fiction. Douglas Clegg: Joanne -- actually, if anyone wants to subscribe, just send a note to JPBelleair@aol.com, the list moderator. Or go to www.onelist.com, register with them, and then search for the DouglasClegg list (one word on DouglasClegg) and sign up. You can find back issues at www.douglasclegg.com. Thanks for asking. Douglas Clegg: Niki -- "Angel Heart" is a terrific film adaptation of FALLING ANGEL by William Hjortsberg. "The Haunting" is a terrific take on THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE by Shirley Jackson (probably my favorite novel of this century). "Bad Dreams" was a really fascinating spin on Bari Wood's DOLL'S EYES. Douglas Clegg: Ratso -- I write it as I send it, but a good friend who has edited some anthologies looks over it first to make sure I don't do anything suicidally goofy. Douglas Clegg: Linda -- no outlines other than weekly ones, when I decide what needs to happen. And then I ignore it. I worked this novel out in my head, and I had to push down on my very small brain to let the characters come alive and take over so that they'd create the story and all I have to do is translate it as best I can. I'm at a point with my fiction where I trust that the story will go where it needs to and will pretty much drag me along with it. Douglas Clegg: Brooke -- weirdly enough, my favorite characters are always the forgotten ones of life: I really love the Diary of a Witch character, and Romeo, and Naomi herself -- and even Jake. And Maddy -- who is not a forgotten one, but she's definitely on the outside looking in and will soon find her destiny within the story. I hate to sound goofy, but I love them all. Douglas Clegg: Bill -- best kept secrets? Tough question, since none of them seem like secrets to me. I loved Boston Teran's GOD IS A BULLET, I loved Bentley Little's THE HOUSE, but hey, Stephen King is amazing me again as if he just was born today when I read BAG OF BONES -- Lucy Taylor is terrific; I love anything by Elizabeth Engstrom. I'm a big fan of this genre. Douglas Clegg: Stan -- yes, I read it! He's a genius. It's a wild ride, it's outrageous and audacious, and if you're looking for a repeat of SILENCE OF THE LAMBS, you won't find it. But it's a gothic revenge story that is both bizarre and believable, and I think Thomas Harris is a guy I'd like to meet. Douglas Clegg: I have always believed in ghosts, and I have always loved nightmares and dreams and all the things we don't know are true. But my biggest draw to horror is that I fell in love with it early -- whether it was my mom reading the scary parts of the Bible or Edgar Allan Poe to us as kids, or whether it was watching "The Twilight Zone" and "Night Gallery," or even when I discovered Thomas Tryon's THE OTHER and Shirley Jackson -- I just felt drawn to terror. Douglas Clegg: Danielle -- absolutely! This is a fun experience, and I hope to find other ways to present my fiction to readers in addition to the more traditional modes. Other writers are doing it: Look at Michael Prescott, whose STEALING FACES is out now in electronic form in Rocket ebook well before the paperback comes out in the coming year. It's an exciting time for writers. Douglas Clegg: Bill -- I guess I'd just have to take this on, case by case. I never really think about writing a novel. I pretty much get a story that won't let go and then write it down. I'm not sure how well this would work in collaborations. But it's a thought! Douglas Clegg: I hope so, but I also hope that other publishers also look at what horror novels they're publishing -- you can't fool readers, and if a story ain't there, it won't find a receptive audience. I would hate for publishers to suddenly start publishing horror novels that no one wanted to read. On the other hand, I'd love to walk in a bookstore and find hundreds of horror novels -- I'd probably read them all. Douglas Clegg: Bonnie -- patience! You will experience everything about the world of this novel before it is over. Hope it continues to hold your interest. Douglas Clegg: DS -- what scares me? God, just about everything. Come up behind me and tap me on the shoulder, and I'll jump three feet. The big question is: What doesn't scare me? Douglas Clegg: PlanetX -- thanks for the word on Andrew Harper. Hey, if my then-publisher had been more supportive, there would've been another one. I have a sequel, but I'm holding it back for now. Meantime: "Phantom Menace": I enjoyed it. I must be the perfect audience for it. I laughed at all the places other people groaned at, and I really liked Natalie Portman and Ewan McGregor and all the aliens and that pod race! Douglas Clegg: Oh sure. I invite Hollywood to come screw with my stories so that I can then do chats and say, "Man, they really screwed up my stories!" while I'm on my yacht. Douglas Clegg: Well, I drink a lot of water. And soda. My favorite is Tab, but I seem to end up with just Coke. Sometimes I wear no shirt; sometimes I wear a shirt; half the time, I'm not sure what I'm wearing. Naw, nothing special, although I do like to play with my cat's mind while I'm writing. Douglas Clegg: Beth -- it's all surprises, because in a way, while I never work out the movement in the book, I just work out who these people are, where they're from, and what world they occupy. In my head, I pretty much need to feel I'm living in their world; then the story just begins to move where it needs to as if fulfilling that world. Okay, it sounds nuts. But I just go with it. I trust my absolutely absurd sense that my imagination has created this world in three dimensions. Douglas Clegg: It never negatively affects my state of mind -- I actually find a lot of hope and redemption and fascination within tales of horror. But I do creep myself out at times and also get some cool nightmares out of it. I think horror is both a recognition and release -- a recognition of chaos at the heart of existence, and also a release of id and energy from the readers and the writers in fiction -- and a healthy, life-enhancing release, too. Douglas Clegg: Lenea -- it will never be too late to sign up. Come on board -- and tell your friends. I think this is an event that we'll all look back on years from now and just say: what fun. I think the electronic frontier needs to be crossed in covered wagons -- or with e-books -- and I hope that the more adventurous writers and readers will do it. Douglas Clegg: Dave -- probably because they're not enjoying the landscape. Me, I love full-blown horror, I love the dark secret within the walls, I love the chimes at midnight and the pale specter in the dark corridor, and yep, I write what I write -- it's horror even when I try to make it a love story, and it's horror even when I try to turn it into a fantasy novel. It's my bent. Douglas Clegg: Don -- I think HALLOWEEN MAN, CHILDREN'S HOUR, and NEVERLAND, although BREEDER might make a really good B-horror movie matinee. Douglas Clegg: Sunny -- that's very generous and great of you. Thanks. Yeah, I love cliffhangers, and I love that aspect of NAOMI. I hope all of you here will give THE NIGHTMARE CHRONICLES a spin, as well as NAOMI, and just keep readin'. Douglas Clegg: Tim -- scratch that itch! Write what you dream up, use that imagination, keep it sharp, and aim high. And don't forget to feed the dog now and then and mow the lawn when the grass is too high. Keep at it. Douglas Clegg: Well, I want to thank everyone here who has subscribed to NAOMI and who has followed my novels since 1989 -- I hope THE NIGHTMARE CHRONICLES and my upcoming novel, YOU COME WHEN I CALL, will enthrall you further and keep you turning pages. Goodnight.
JWC901@aol.com from New Jersey: By writing an entire novel in email form, don't you worry about the fact that many people simply don't like reading stuff online and prefer having an actual book in front of them?
Bonnie from BcatS@aol.com: Hi, Doug. I am a big fan. Any chance we'll see some of the characters from THE HALLOWEEN MAN in another novel?
Brian Knight from Clarkston, WA: I am a writer, and my latest novel, BLACK DAY, has attracted some attention, but I have been unable to get published. How would I go about getting published online?
Mark from NYC: How did this e-serial novel come about? Also, will you also be publishing the entire thing at any time?
Gary from Coos Bay, OR: I just finished HALLOWEEN MAN and enjoyed it immensely. It is the only one of your works I have read (with the exception of the NAOMI installments I have received via email). Which one of your books are you most proud of, and if you had to recommend only one (I know, it's a tough one), which one would it be? I love your writing and am anxious to read more. Thanks!
Curious from USA: NAOMI is scheduled to arrive to subscribers, via email, until the middle of October. Is it possible it could continue beyond this time, due to new plot ideas you may come up with?
Fred from Pennsylvania: Do you feel more authors will go to the idea of releasing their work through the web type media?
Dee Richter from Wisconsin: Your e-novel is a great idea, and I'm enjoying it immensely. Are there plans in your future for having a book signing in the Milwaukee area?
Don from New York: Hi, Doug. Are you approaching the writing of NAOMI differently than you do your other novels? Do you feel compelled to go back and make changes to parts of the book that have already been serialized?
Randy from Columbus, GA: I have read all of your books, and I am looking forward to the next one. What is NIGHTMARE CHRONICLES, and when will it be published?
Joanne from Half Moon Bay: How can I subscribe to the email novel NAOMI? The concept sounds pretty interesting.
Niki from Niki_palek@yahoo.com: Hello, Douglas Clegg! Good of you to join us this evening. What in your opinion is the best adaptation of a horror novel to the big screen?
Ratso Reilly from Statesboro, GA: This e-serial novel -- do have the entire thing already written, or do you write it as you send it? Also, do you still use an editor for a project like this?
Linda from New York: Are you working from an outline, and do you find the added pressure of having a weekly deadline stimulating or not?
Brooke from NYC: There is a lot going on so far in NAOMI, and I am just wondering if you have a preference for one particular story line and, if so, which one would that be.
Bill from Trenton: Who would you say are the most underrated authors in the horror field? The genre's best-kept secrets?
Stan from Concord, CA: Have you read the latest Harris novel yet? I am looking for a legitimate source who has read it.
Curious from USA: I imagine you could pretty much write whatever type of fiction you chose. Why have you chosen horror/dark fantasy? Has anything ever happened to you that would lead to a fascination with the paranormal?
Danielle from San Francisco: Doug -- I must say I am quite enjoying the novel. The fact that it is coming to me via email makes me feel like I am hearing about an experience with a friend rather than reading a book. Do you think you will continue releasing novels in this form?
Bill from New York City: Would you ever collaborate with another author on a story or novel? If you would, who would it be with?
Matt from New York City: Leisure Books is incredible. God bless them for releasing such great horror books. Do you think that there's a chance other publishers could follow suit and start publishing more horror paperbacks?
BcatS@aol.com from Tennessee: I'm fascinated with the forbidden city. Will it be fully explained by the end of NAOMI?
DS from Texas: You've probably been asked this question millions of times, but I'll go ahead and ask it anyway: What scares Douglas Clegg?
PlanetX from aol.com: So tell us...what did ya think of "The Phantom Menace"? I loved BAD KARMA, by the way -- any chance for the return of Andrew Harper?
Mario from Texas: With the reputation that Hollywood has of totally screwing up film adaptations of horror novels, would you ever consider a film adaptation of any of your novels?
Fred from Pennsylvania: When cranking out the stories do you have a special thing you do, like listen to the radio? Drink a soda? Wear a certain shirt? Do ten jumping jacks?
Beth from Virginia: Doug -- you say you've had this story worked out to some degree for a while but you're letting the characters take you where they need to go. Have there been any surprises for you in the development of NAOMI?
Randi from Dover, NJ: Do you think writing horror ever negatively affects your state of mind? Do you ever creep yourself out and put yourself in a horror-filled or nightmarish state of mind?
Lenea from Lenea734@aol.com: How far into NAOMI are you? Is it too late to sign up?
Dave M. from Texas: How come everyone seems to be steering away from full-blown horror? Thank God you're still doing pure horror -- I love it. Keep up the good work. Do you plan on sticking to the horror genre?
Don from New York: The earlier question about film adaptations of books made me wonder: Which of your books do you think would most lend itself to being a movie? THE HALLOWEEN MAN was incredibly cinematic, I think.
Sunny from Minneapolis: I must admit I never read anything in the horror genre till a friend of mine sent me the first two installments of your email novel...now I am hooked. I went out and purchased all your books, read three so far, and found them incredible...not at all what I thought horror was. So I just wanted to say thank you for bring me into a new genre, and I love your email novel so far -- reminds me of the old cliffhangers from when I was younger.
Tim from Oklahoma: Doug -- I would just like to say thanks for the inspiration to actively start submitting my short stories once again. I am currently in my tenth year of service with the USAF and find it very hard to find the time to write, let alone submit them. (Although that's the world's most common excuse.) Reading NAOMI has been very enjoyable and has brought that itch back, and I am sending out another story tomorrow. Persistence, persistence, persistence.... Thanks!
Moderator: Thank you, Douglas Clegg, and best of luck with HALLOWEEN MAN and your serial novel, NAOMI. Before you leave us, do you have any parting thoughts for the online audience?