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Dark Seeker de K. W. Jeter

de K. W. Jeter - Género: English
libro gratis Dark Seeker

Sinopsis


His son is dead...


Or that's what he believed. Caught up in the lethal madness of a Manson-like cult, Tyler has lost everything that once mattered to him. Out of prison, on a strict regimen of medications to keep the demons inside his head from returning, he knows he's always one small step away from returning to that dark place and its horrors.


So when his ex-wife emerges from the shadows into which she had fled, and tells him that their son is still alive, kidnapped by another former member of the murderous group, Tyler has some tough, soul-threatening decisions to make. He can take the safe route, that will keep him sane and alive, and just assume that his ex-wife is lost in some psychotic delusion about their dead son. Or he can take the risk that maybe -- just maybe -- she's somehow telling the truth. He can stop taking the medications that the doctors give him, and go back into that dark world of madness and murder, to try and find the child that had gone missing so long ago. But if Tyler finds his son, will he be able to save him? And what will be left of him when he does?


"The real pleasure of this book is in the quality of the writing. Jeter
places three-dimensional characters in authentic Southern California
landscapes with more grit than glamor . . . DARK SEEKER provides an
intense experience that sticks in the mind — further proof of Jeter’s
versatile talent."
– Locus


". . . this may well be his best book yet. It is directed, dynamically paced, extremely well-written in a modified Chandleresque style, gritty and unsentimental about the failures of humanity, tight and economical, and with a lot to say about people and the devils inside them. It never lags but is deliberate when it needs to be; the plot denouement, usually the AchillesÂ’ heel of horror, is splendidly worked out. It often seems in this genre that even the best writers can set up all the elements for the last twenty pages, yet never come through on them. Jeter has done an admirable job . . ."
– OtherRealms


"This made me feel like a church gargoyle looking out over a witch hunt in some zombie thrash pit. Not only that, it's really well written...'
– SF Book Reviews, sfbook.com


"Effective, briskly paced, nicely tense..."
– Goodreads.com


"Fully realized, Jeter describes the endless roadways, the underpasses, the street corners and movie theaters with much color, much dread."
– Douglaspurdy.com


Reseñas Varias sobre este libro



'tis the season...

13 TALES OF TERROR: BOOK 7

this is a surprisingly effective, briskly paced, nicely tense, and occasionally interesting bit of horror-thriller.

poor Mike Tyler has a problematic past: once a part of a group of pretentious college kids devoted to a pretentious professor slash guru slash svengali, these kids and their prof decided to take it to the next level by regular ingestion of the highly illegal drug The Host - which apparently induces both hallucinatory effects and shared empathic group connection. sadly, The Host is similar to that Blue Sunshine drug from the movie called, er, Blue Sunshine, and so zany murderous Manson Family-style slaughter-hijinks ensued. but all that is behind him. after all he didn't take part in the murders - he was merely an accomplice. after some hard time in both prison and a mental institution, and medicated to the gills, he's managed to carve out a decent living with a nice live-in girlfriend and her son. unfortunately for Mike, not only does The Host stay in your system permanently (thus the constant meds) but a member of the group has come out of the woodwork and is trying to recruit Mike back in - by kidnapping his supposedly long-dead son from Mike's once-vanished ex-wife. uh oh!

K.W. Jeter is a genre maverick, having paved the way for both cyberpunk and steampunk with novels Dr. Adder and Morlock Night. at some point he apparently decided to make some cash by churning out a series of lurid horror novels that probably looked great on the shelves of various B Daltons and Waldenbooks across the nation. such is Dark Seeker. i hope he made some money off of this one.

Jeter has an individualistic vision that encompasses the Los Angeles landscape of freeways and strip malls, a grim and sour misanthropy, the need for his characters to escape from various dark pasts, and a fairly expert use of parallel narratives that comment on each other in intriguing ways. he clearly has writing chops (except for the overuse of various cringe-worthy parentheticals denoting thoughts-within-thoughts) and he just as clearly has the ability to outwrite more popular horror hacks. such is Dark Seeker. i hope he didn't beat himself up too much when seeing his novels shelved next to Koontz and Saul.

i was impressed with Jeter's skill at portraying what it feels to be on hallucinogens. the taste in the mouth, the subtle colored outlines, the thrilling expansion of sound and vision. although now the idea of taking acid sounds about as fun to me as taking bleach, back in my college days i did it more times than i can remember. i used to love it so much that the idea of being on acid 24/7, of never coming down, was awesome to me... shudder! The Host is 24/7 and it also features visions of a pointy-teethed lil' guy who wants you to kill kill kill. my own hallucinogenic escapades tended to feature pleasant colored wavy things and the need to be in water and dreamy visions of the brotherhood of mankind. The Host's hallucinogenic qualities make participants want to tear limbs from bodies, bathe in blood and laugh hyenas. different strokes for different folks i guess.

horror-60s-70s-80s z-kw-jeter35 s Ian17 3

A powerful novel about a cult that twisted the sanity of its members, it reminded me of Robert W. Chambers' Repairer of Reputations with its layered visions of reality. They shared a drug which created not only a shared mind, but also left them permanently changed. The story revolves around the broken lives of a number of its ex-members, some of whom have done time, others who were never caught. It hints at, rather than directly confronts their crimes, this is no true crime expose, rather an uncomfortable ride amongst those existing on the fringes. It's slow, deliberate and methodical, gradually peeling back the layers to reveal the truth and lies beneath it all.6 s1 comment Josh1,695 160

Interesting concept; members of a cult who took experimental drugs which bonded them together with a dark entity in a shared conscience continue to feel the effects years later.

Read a sequel rather than a standalone story which dimmed the experience for me (this wasnÂ’t a sequel, however, so more backstory wouldÂ’ve been a good).

A bit of a snooze fest for the most part, however the story was salvaged in the last couple of chapters. The ‘horror’ is on the peripheral for the most part. horror own read_20224 s Paul Walsh60 9

Interesting premise: the idea that a drug can cause a hive-mind effect, and remain within the blood system permanently affecting you.

Interesting plot beginning: picking up years after a group of students follow their college professor in taking the drug that makes them go on a Charles Mansonesque killing spree, and following one ex-member's constant attempts to stay on the wagon after reforming into society, even after he gets dragged back into the affairs of his old group.

Not so interesting: the lack of a solid antagonist. Constant alluding to the monster within the drug makes it a supernatural entity that Mike seems to be fighting against, yet there is no payoff to this particular line of plot. The physical villian really hasn't much to do with the story other than at the beginning and end, and even then he doesn't seem to be much of an actual threat.

Plus points for quick pace throughout story though, and the interesting backstory to the drug and the users.horror4 s Kris1,152 9

Got this in a bundle of Philip K Dick award nominees/winners, I think. Ending is terrible - reads the author was imagining it as a movie instead of writing a book. The concept of the drug itself is interesting. 2 s Micah SiskAuthor 5 books57

Bleakness, murder, insanity, addiction, horribleness.

Though the concept of a drug that induces a kind of shared-mind connection between its users is intriguing, the plot that unfolds here does little with that notion. I felt the mystery of book (the demons inside the main character's head, as alluded to in the blurb) is drawn way out, and brought to no ultimate reveal. The book relies heavily on repetitive statements to the effect that something is about to come, happen or be revealed ... It drags on and on ploddingly, pulling you through a world of darkness and despair, spiraling ever deeper into insanity hopelessness with no chance of redemption or resolution.

The whole thing left me very depressed, rather Philip K. Dick's novel Martian Timeslip did, only PKD at least kept you guessing and made you think along the way. There's little of that here, just a plot that follows its characters along mechanically ... they go here, they do this, they do that without really advancing the plot beyond moving them toward the final confrontation. I found myself skimming long passages that revealed nothing really new.

For the first third of the book I d it a bit more, but it really wore me down and by the end, I simply didn't care much what happened.2 s Brendan Lewis1 reviewRead

This is a seperate class altogether. Its the only book I know of that brings together the selfish and self destructive nature of addiction, the delusion of desire and the bleak subconscious landscape whereupon our motives play out their real agenda. An astonishing work at the very pinacle of an inverted american pop culture, that might exist in a darkened mirror, in a deserted motel on the nights hellway. Jrubino1,037 5

A collection of stock characters fail to create interesting opening chapters. Michael Pritchett130 1 follower

Not my preference of reading material. It felt a lot of internal repetitive introspection supported by little framework. There was a whole story here somewhere, but maybe the of it was. the references to the past. Benjamin17 Read

I this author's sci-fi works. This is horror and pretty much a waste of time. Mary109 3

I loved the twists Richard8

Pretty bleak, well written Roy272

Disappointing. A slow buildup without much payoff. Wouldn't have bothered to finish it except it was short. Paul100 2

I didn't remember anything about it until I noticed I had finished it on my kindle and went to enter it in Goodreads. Arref Mak133 1 followerRead

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