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Curfew

di Phil Rickman

UtentiRecensioniPopolaritàMedia votiCitazioni
3721368,597 (3.99)20
Every night for 400 years, a curfew bell has tolled from the church tower of Crybbe. Superstitious ritual, or sole defence against an ancient evil?
  1. 00
    The M.D. di Thomas M. Disch (ehines)
    ehines: Rickman is quite different from Disch--he likes people better, and is more likely to combine horror with light-humorous observation, but in their common ability to make interesting observations about contemporary life and our hunger for meaning within this genre, they are akin.… (altro)
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Be not daunted by the length of this engrossingly book by Brit author Rickman - it's time well spent on ghostie-ghoulie terrain seldom explored by American horror-meisters. Kim Newman's "Jago" touched on some ancient mysteries in the borderlands but not so compellingly as Rickman. A treat for those of us always looking for new supernatural stories. ( )
  Lemeritus | Oct 16, 2021 |
Great book! If you like Stephen King's books, you'll enjoy this one. Not as much horror, but the tension keeps building and you have to read it to the end. The town is a real character and the people's reaction to old history and superstition is very well drawn. Great writer, great story. The only negative, a bit too long at 498 pages. ( )
  MariaGreene | Jun 30, 2021 |
Phil Rickman is an author who continues to write the kind of horror novels I like best. This novel managed to keep me from guessing the outcome ahead of time.

Bless you, Phil Rickman, for your sensitive handling of Arnold's storyline and not going for the cheap emotional manipulation so frequently used by the tired hacks of the horror genre. This book earns a Pet Lovers Seal of Approval!

*SPOILERISH*

I do love a story where sweet ladies of a certain age wearing tartan skirts and errant heavy equipment operators can be heroes and possibly hook up for a happily-ever-after ending in the readers imagination. ( )
1 vota Equestrienne | Jan 5, 2021 |
Loved this book. ( )
  Chica3000 | Dec 11, 2020 |
I picked Curfew up from the library after coming it across it on a thread on Facebook where people had posted on their scariest reads. It's a long time since I've read a book that really petrified me and love watching films through my fingers. I admit to binging on Shaun Hutson in my teenage years. Then got into a bit of a silly snobby phase of reading "literature." So left the horror genre behind and never really got back to it.

Now I've read that Rickman doesn't like his early books - of which "Curfew" (originally published as "Crybbe") was his second offering - being caterogised as horror. So he may be happy to read that I wouldn't class it as a horror either. It is a certainly a story with supernatural elements; creepy but not terrifying; violent deaths abound but descriptions aren't playing for shock value gore. What makes it engaging is that Rickman draws his inspiration from British folklore and ritual; you get a sense of the eerie atmosphere of historic and sometimes ancient towns and villages. You certainly get a realistic experience of the distrustful and exclusionary nature of locals towards people from 'off'.

The novel moves with the pace of visiting tourist. It's almost 700 pages but I enjoyed every page. The multiple characters are well drawn and distinct. They are believable and have to be for the reader to accept the supernatural events that slowly build to a crescendo.

Rickman is an author I will certainly read again. ( )
  Georgina_Watson | Jun 14, 2020 |
New Age mystics, led by a record producer moonlighting as a necromancer, rouse a sleepy town's evil spirits in this stylish novel of the occult, the first U.S. publication for British author Rickman.... Rickman convinces with his intricate account of the town's hex: ancient ``ley-lines'' mapped out by druidic-style stones conduct a psychic power that the traditional curfew of the novel's title--100 rings of the church bell every night at 10 o'clock--can only contain for so long. The spell is so complete, in fact, that closure becomes difficult: Rickman himself can't--or won't--quite shut the door on the horrors that he introduces here.
aggiunto da Lemeritus | modificaPublisher's Weekly (Jun 28, 1993)
 
Horror myth meets New Age psychology on the ghost-riddled border of England and Wales. Promising American debut of a former BBC radio and TV journalist who did a four-year radio stint focused on the supernatural in Wales.... The stones arise—and then the whole town's rocking as the energy-sucking dragon erupts like a grotesque marriage of St. Michael and the batwinged Satan of Disney's ``Night on Bald Mountain'' in Fantasia.... Old stuff made to dance anew with smart writing, classy passages.
aggiunto da Lemeritus | modificaKirkus Reviews (May 15, 1993)
 
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In memory of Joachim 'Lupo' Wolf, a genuine new age healer who partly inspired this book.
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In Crybbe, night did not fall. Night rose.
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Crybbe was published as Curfew in the U.S.
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Every night for 400 years, a curfew bell has tolled from the church tower of Crybbe. Superstitious ritual, or sole defence against an ancient evil?

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