House of Small Shadows

House of Small Shadows

Cover for the 2013 UK release
Author Adam Nevill
Country United Kingdom
Language English
Genre Horror
Published 2013, Pan Books (UK)
2014, St. Martin's Press (US)
Media type Print, e-book
Pages 384 pages (UK)
ISBN 0330544241 (UK)
Preceded by Last Days
Followed by No One Gets Out Alive

House of Small Shadows (also stylized as The House of Small Shadows for its United States release) is a 2013 supernatural horror novel by English writer Adam Nevill. The book was first published in the United Kingdom on October 10, 2013 through Pan Books and was released in the United States on July 15, 2014, through St. Martin's Press. The book follows an antique appraiser that returns home, only to be confronted with the horror of Red House and with her own personal tragedies.

Synopsis

The book follows Catherine, a young woman with a troubled past, and is set in the present day. Through flashbacks interspersed throughout the book the reader learns about her past, which is extremely complicated.

Catherine was abandoned by her birth parents in Ellyll Fields, a fictional small village near Hereford. While she did find an adoptive family, it is not a happy arrangement and they frequently questioned her mental health. Ostracized at school, Catherine only had one friend - a young mentally challenged girl named Alice that was also an outcast. They get along well until the summer of 1981, when Alice is one of several children that were kidnapped by the mysterious Pied Piper of Ellyll. Soon after her disappearance Catherine claims to have made contact with Alice's ghost, which prompts her adoptive parents to send her to therapy. As time passes a now adult Catherine forms a relationship with a man named Mike, but the relationship ends badly. Hoping to cause some change in her life, Catherine travels to London and takes a job with a prestigious TV network. However, her hoped for change doesn't come to pass and she is fired from her position from a bullying co-worker named Tara.

Shattered by the experience, Catherine returns home and tries to once again rebuild her life. She takes on a job as an antique appraiser for a local handicapped man named Leonard and also manages to romantically re-connect with Mike. Things seem to be going well until Catherine suffers a miscarriage, which signals the end of her relationship with Mike, although she suspects that he really left her because he was seeing another woman. After an unspecified amount of time Catherine is persuaded to take on a job cataloging the contents of Red House, the home of the late M. H. Mason, a local eccentric known for his antique dolls, puppets, and morbid taxidermy displays. Once at the house Catherine is greatly unsettled by Mason's elderly niece Edith, her maid Maude, the house, and its contents. She's pressured to stay by both Edith and reluctantly chooses to stay, despite her own reservations about everything. That night Catherine hears several odd noises that sounds like people walking around during the night, an occurrence that Edith later tries to explain away as Maude walking about. However these noises are only the first of a series of increasingly bizarre and strange occurrences, which lead up to a scene where Mike shows up to try to rescue Catherine from Red House. Despite Maude warning her to leave, Catherine refuses Mike's assistance of help, as she has since learned that Mike left her for Tara, who has come to Red House in order to steal the job from Catherine.

This all culminates in Catherine coming to the realization that she was set up by Leonard, who is part of a cult along with Edith, Maude, and the late M. H. Mason. She goes through a series of surreal visions that include her coming across the bodies of Mike and Tara. This last vision particularly confuses her, as Catherine later discovers Tara in one of the house's rooms, alive but badly tortured. Disoriented, Catherine continues to try to escape the house but instead comes across Leonard and Maude in the midst of a sacrificial ritual where Maude is the sacrifice. This prompts Catherine to realize that Maude is her true mother and that she had given Catherine away per the cult's commands. The book ends with Tara assuming the role of the new housekeeper and Catherine remaining in the house as its mistress.

Reception

Critical reception for House of Small Shadows has been mostly positive,[1][2] and the book received praise from Rue Morgue and The Independent.[3][4] Tor.com and The Guardian expressed some criticism over the character of Catherine, as Tor.com found her past to be overly convoluted and The Guardian noted that her passive nature and "barely believable reasons why she can't or won't leave the house" did cause a "kind of stasis [that] freezes the novel".[5][6] The Guardian gave the book a favorable review overall, while the reviewer for Tor.com commented that the character of Catherine kept them from enjoying the book as much as they would have otherwise.[5][6] The reviewer for the Lancashire Evening Post gave a favorable review for the work, writing "Original, unsettling and genuinely scary, this is a book to be read only in daylight hours…".[7]

References

  1. "The House of Small Shadows (review)". Booklist. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  2. "THE HOUSE OF SMALL SHADOWS (review)". Kirkus Reviews. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  3. Snellings, April. "HELL’S SHELVES: HOUSE OF SMALL SHADOWS AND THE RETURNED". Rue Morgue. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  4. Barnett, David. "Superheroes, deadly dolls, space pilots, and underworlds". Independent. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  5. 1 2 VanderMeer, Jeff. "House of Small Shadows by Adam Nevill – review". The Guardian. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  6. 1 2 Alexander, Niall. "A Dance With Dolls: House of Small Shadows by Adam Nevill". Tor.com. Retrieved 31 August 2014.
  7. Norfolk, Pam. "Book review: House of Small Shadows by Adam Nevill". Lancashire Evening Post. Retrieved 31 August 2014.

External links

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