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The Auctioneer (Paperbacks from Hell)
The Auctioneer (Paperbacks from Hell) | Joan Samson
14 posts | 7 read | 17 to read
One of the finest and best-selling horror novels of the 1970s returns at last to chill a new generation of readers In the isolated farming community of Harlowe, New Hampshire, where life has changed little over the past several decades, John Moore and his wife Mim work the land that has been in his family for generations. But from the moment the charismatic Perly Dunsmore arrives in town and starts soliciting donations for his auctions, things begin slowly and insidiously to change in Harlowe. As the auctioneer carries out his terrible, inscrutable plan, the Moores and their neighbors will find themselves gradually but inexorably stripped of their possessions, their freedom, and perhaps even their lives ... A chilling masterpiece of terror whose sense of creeping menace and dread increases page by page, Joan Samson's The Auctioneer (1975) is a rediscovered classic of 20th-century fiction. With echoes of Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery" and Stephen King's Needful Things, Samson's novel returns to print at last in this long-awaited new edition, which features an introduction by Grady Hendrix (Horrorstr, Paperbacks from Hell). "Buy this book ... there is no way to stop reading it, once you've started!" - Baltimore Sun "A well-made piece of dynamite ... For all their talk, the author seems to be saying, men will permit their souls to be carried away bit by bit and auctioned off to the highest bidder. Samson has written a suspenseful, engrossing novel with the most gripping and violent ending we've encountered for some time."--Newsday "A frightening novel . . . a powerful book from a powerful writer."--The Grand Rapids Press "A novel you may never forget . . . a tight classic."--San Diego Tribune "Brilliant, compelling . . . Add a powerful twist at the end and you have a total novel that takes hold of the reader on Page One and never lets go until the finish. This just could prove to be one of the top thrillers of the year."--Dayton News
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review
MadDustKitties
Mehso-so

I seem to be among the minority on this book. I didn't enjoy it like so many did. I felt there was too much repetition. There was potential to feel emotionally invested in John and Mim, but they were kept at arms length. I kept reading because it seemed like it was going somewhere, but it never did.

review
shortsarahrose
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Pickpick

The scariest book I‘ve read this spooky season because everything in it could actually happen. No monsters or cults. Nothing supernatural. Just people. Terrifying, atmospheric social horror. As relevant now as when it was first published in 1976. I‘ll be thinking about this one for a long time.

LeahBergen I‘m going to have to grab a copy of this one, I see! I love the reissued Valancourt Classics. 12mo
34 likes1 comment
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shortsarahrose
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Time for #coffeeandabook - vanilla latte and a waffle 🧇 and my spooky book

quote
shortsarahrose
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“Then he said, the words piling high on each other with the difficulty of saying them, with the horror of having done it, ‘It was a bad mistake, burnin‘ Mickey‘s money.‘
And his wife turned to him sobbing very suddenly, as though she had been crying all along and he had not been able to hear it.”

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shortsarahrose
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It‘s a dreary October day, but perfect for #coffeeandabook - vanilla latte with an extra shot, a pumpkin spice cake bite, and a spooky book

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shortsarahrose
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“Mim caught her lower lip in her teeth and unconsciously grasped Hildie by the shoulders. ‘What did he do?‘ she whispered.”

review
khooliha
Pickpick

I don't know if "pick" is quite the feeling I have about this book - it's well written but profoundly depressing, what with it being about living under rising fascism.

khooliha Unlike the book, though, I don't have a problem with killing fascists. 2y
5 likes1 stack add1 comment
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khooliha
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When describing the moon, what is the difference in shape between a half orange and a whole orange?

julesG 🤔 2y
6 likes1 comment
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shortsarahrose
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“‘I‘d like to know by which old-time values Harlowe needs such a heap of deputies,‘ John said.
‘There you go, John,‘ Mim said. ‘Lookin‘ for worries again.‘
‘Not me,‘ John said. ‘We‘re quit of the auctions for our part. It‘s nothin‘ to me what they do in town.‘”

review
Bertha_Mason
The Auctioneer | Joan Samson
Mehso-so

I think that analytically the story bit off more than it could chew and unceremoniously spat the morsel back out, with Dunsmore's brief, unrevisited foray into nazi racial rhetoric. But when it keeps its gaze strictly on the howling emptiness at the heart of whiteness, and how it eats itself when it has no racialized others to feed on (like, say, in an all-white small town) it's a solid story about u.s. imperialism coming home to roost.

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BekahB
The Auctioneer | Joan Samson
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Pickpick

Another fantastic audiobook by Valancourt Books! This is my favorite kind of horror - one where the tension slowly builds until you‘re caught up in the middle of it. This story had me wound up the entire time and made me question whether I‘d choose fight or flight if facing someone like Perly Dinsmore.

The narration was excellent! I‘ll definitely look for more books narrated by Matt Godfrey. I know he‘s done a couple others for Valancourt. 🎧

57 likes3 stack adds
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BekahB
The Auctioneer | Joan Samson
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YESSSSSS! I‘ve been obsessively checking Valancourt Books‘ site the past couple months, waiting for this audiobook‘s release date. I just happened to stumble across their Instagram post saying it‘s now available. And now it‘s waiting for me in my Audible library...so excited! 😃

This will definitely be my next audiobook. I‘ve loved Valancourt‘s other audiobook releases so I expect this one will be great too! I‘m hoping to start it during #24in48.

43 likes1 stack add
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BeckyLeJ
The Auctioneer | Joan Samson
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Seemed like appropriate hotel reading material for the Ghost Town Writers' Retreat. Grady Hendrix basically says this is a forgotten horror classic!

BekahB This one sounds so good! I just got a copy and I'm saving it for October! 😀 7y
20 likes2 stack adds1 comment