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The Caretaker of Lorne Field

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A cursed teenager must contend with the flames of adolescence—and rescue kids from the flames of hell—in this humorous tale of terror.
"My name's Henry Dudlow. I'm fifteen and a half. And I'm cursed. Or damned. Take your pick. The reason? I see demons." 
So begins the latest novel by horror master Dave Zeltserman. The setting is quiet Newton, Massachussetts, where nothing ever happens. Nothing, that is, until two months after Henry Dudlow's thirteenth birthday, when his neighbor, Mr. Hanley, suddenly starts to look . . . different. While everyone else sees a balding man with a beer belly, Henry suddenly sees a nasty, bilious, rage-filled demon. 
Once Henry catches onto the real Mr. Hanley, he starts to see demons all around him, and his boring, adolescent life is transformed. There's no more time for friends or sports or the lovely Sally Freeman—instead Henry must work his way through ancient texts and hunt down the demons before they steal any more innocent children. And if hunting demons is hard at any age, it's borderline impossible when your parents are on your case, and your grades are getting worse, and you can't tell anyone about your chosen mission. 
A very scary novel written with verve and flashes of great humor, The Boy Who Killed Demons is Dave Zeltserman's most accomplished and entertaining horror novel yet. 
Praise for The Boy Who Killed Demons
"Like Stephen King, Dave Zeltserman makes the incredible come alive." —Bookreporter.com
"Amusing. . . . Zeltserman manages the voice of a teenager deftly, and the adolescent angst rings true. The demons are almost background to a tale about growing up. Zeltserman has written an entertaining novel but not one that will keep you from turning off the lights." —Kirkus Reviews
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from May 3, 2010
      Zeltserman’s superb mix of humor and horror focuses on Jack Durkin, the ninth generation of firstborn sons in his family who have daily weeded Lorne Field to purge it of Aukowies, bloodthirsty plants that could overrun the world in weeks if not attended to. Though Jack takes his job seriously, no one else does: his oldest son doesn’t want to follow in his footsteps; his wife is tired of living poorly on his caretaker’s salary; and the townspeople who subsidize him are increasingly skeptical of purported menaces that no one has ever seen because Jack diligently nips them in the bud. With his support dwindling, Jack finds himself driven to desperate measures to prove that he’s truly saving the world. Zeltserman (Pariah) orchestrates events perfectly, making it impossible to tell if Jack is genuinely humankind’s unsung hero or merely the latest descendant of a family of superstitious loonies. Readers will keep turning the pages to see how the ambiguous plot resolves.

    • Kirkus

      June 15, 2010

      The Durkins have been saving the world for 300 years. The trouble is that nobody believes it.

      Most of his fellow townspeople think of Jack Durkin as that dotty old weed-puller. Some get nastier. Pointedly, they insist that Durkin fingers have been in the town far too long. What hurts most is the viper in Jack's nest: Lydia, his distinctly anti-Penelope wife, who sides with his detractors. The mystery started in 1710 when the famous (or infamous) Contract was drawn up to recompense the heirs of the early, reluctantly heroic Durkin chosen to preserve the town, and by extension the world, from the assault of the Aukowies. Blanketing Lorne Field like a riot of weeds, they seemed less dangerous than unsightly, but no weed ever had such lethal potential. Catch them at two inches and they were manageable. Turn your back and they zoomed to five, requiring Herculean efforts to exterminate. Above five inches, the cause was lost. According to the Book of the Aukowies, it would take only weeks to "ravage the land," converting humankind into "mincemeat." Increasingly now, there are days when heartsick Jack, beset by ingrates, betrayed by those he loves most, contemplates his mission and considers it impossible.

      Harrowing. Zeltserman (Killer, 2010, etc.) colors it black with the best of them.

      (COPYRIGHT (2010) KIRKUS REVIEWS/NIELSEN BUSINESS MEDIA, INC. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.)

    • Library Journal

      July 1, 2010
      Crime writer Zeltserman ("Killer; Pariah" has produced a nail-biter. Caretaker Jack Durkin is obsessively faithful to an ancient book and a contract that requires him daily to weed a huge expanse from dawn to dusk, else "Aukowies," fiends nine feet tall with multiple fangs, will appear out of the ground to destroy the world. Jack knows he's an authentic superhero, but he is gradually betrayed by family and friends, unbelievers in the reality of his contract. Townsfolk sneer, and Jack suffers a variety of agonies, despite which he continues his exhausting labors, until finally he has no defender left. The narrative is straightforward and gritty, reminiscent of works of Dashiell Hammett. Place and time seem to float, and this tends to dislocate the reader, who may also come to doubt Jack's sanity. VERDICTNot literary or even stylish but gripping and actually "horrifying," this title is recommended for horror fans and readers who may relish unpleasant surprises.—Jonathan Pearce, California State Univ. at Stanislaus, Stockton

      Copyright 2010 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      June 1, 2010
      This superbly crafted horror story explores the dichotomy between belief and rationality. Why has a small town maintained a contract since the eighteenth century with a member of the community and his heirs to pull weeds in Lorne Field? Jack Durkin, the current and ninth generation of Lorne Field caretakers, says the things he pulls from the ground arent weeds; they are something called Aukowies, and if theyre not pulled up by the roots and burned every day, the world will end. Under pressure from his wife to get a real job; from the town fathers (looking to save a few bucks and end the contract); and from his sons, who dont see themselves as career weed-pullers, Durkin is finally out of a job. No more weed pulling. So is he just a nut case, or does the novel segue into another Little Shop of Horrors? Sorry, we dont do spoilers. Horror fans will have to read this first-class cautionary tale themselves.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2010, American Library Association.)

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