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Heart-Shaped Box: A Novel | 
enlarge | Author: Joe Hill Publisher: William Morrow Category: Book
List Price: $24.95 Buy Used: $0.45 You Save: $24.50 (98%)
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Avg. Customer Rating: 284 reviews Sales Rank: 28449
Media: Hardcover Edition: 1 Number Of Items: 1 Pages: 384 Shipping Weight (lbs): 1.3 Dimensions (in): 9.1 x 6.3 x 1.4
ISBN: 0061147931 Dewey Decimal Number: 813.6 EAN: 9780061147937 ASIN: 0061147931
Publication Date: February 1, 2007 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days Shipping: Expedited shipping available Shipping: International shipping available Condition: Some wear on cover and pages, ex-library, some stamps and stickers on book, some spine creases, we guarantee all purchases and ship all items via USPS mail.
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| Editorial Reviews:
Amazon.com Review Do you sleep with the light on? Are you in the habit of checking your doors and windows before you go to bed? Maybe even checking under your bed? If you are about to crack open Joe Hill's chilling thriller Heart-Shaped Box, you might want to rethink your nighttime habits--Hill's story about an aging rock star (with a penchant for macabre artifacts) who buys a haunted suit online will scare you silly. But don't take our word for it. We asked bestselling authors (and masters of dark terror tales themselves) Scott Smith, and Harlan Coben to read Heart-Shaped Box and give us their take. Check out their reviews below, and you might want to pick up a nightlight while you're at it. --Daphne Durham Guest Reviewer: Scott Smith
In 1993, Scott Smith wowed readers with his stunning debut thriller, A Simple Plan. Thirteen years later, he spooked us again with The Ruins, a horror-thriller about four Americans traveling in Mexico who stumble across a nightmare in the jungle.
The set-up for Joe Hill's novel, Heart-Shaped Box, is appealingly simple. Jude Coyne, an aging rock star, buys himself a dead man's suit. He acquires it online, lured by the promise that the dead man's ghost will be included in his purchase. Jude thinks this is a joke, of course. He also assumes the seller is a stranger. We soon discover that he's wrong on both counts, however, and from this point on the story moves with an exhilarating urgency. Jude wants the ghost gone; the ghost wants Jude dead. We watch, chapter-by-chapter, as they battle for survival. "Watch" is the appropriate word, too, because this is an extremely visual book. Hill's prose is lean and precise, and he renders Jude's world with impressive confidence. It feels solid, every detail both correct and fresh. And this physicality provides a firm platform for the book's otherworldly happenings, which seem all the more frightening for being so securely grounded. Hill has a flawless sense of pacing. His narrative never flags, nor does it ever move so quickly as to outrun itself. And one can sense his literary ambition pushing at the margins of the genre. There are times when his writing, for all its spare efficiency, seems to jump away from him, stopping one small step short of poetry. An e-mail to Jude from the ghost (trust me, it's not as absurd as it sounds) could even pass for something ee cummings might've written, in an especially morbid mood. And toward the end of the book, when Hill describes a trip down death's "night road" in a '65 Mustang, the passage has a startlingly lyrical beauty. The story's horror ultimately has as much to do with Jude Coyne's past--his mistakes, abandonments and betrayals--as with anything supernatural. Jude has caused a lot of pain over the years, moving through life with a carelessness that verges on the callous. His battle with the ghost brings this behavior into sharp relief, forcing him to reflect upon his own capacity for cruelty. This dawning self-awareness leavens the book's bleakness and gore (and it is delightfully gory in places) with an unexpected sweetness. Despite our initial impression, Jude is gradually revealed--both to himself and the reader--as an essentially decent, even kind man. It's this kindness, this fledgling ability to love and be loved, that will ultimately be of crucial consequence in his death struggle with the ghost. And it's what makes Hill's debut not only well-written and terrifying, but also--as it draws to its close--surprisingly moving. So go ahead, take a chance, and open his Heart-Shaped Box. I think youll be happy you did. --Scott Smith
| Guest Reviewer: Harlan Coben
Harlan Coben is the author of the beloved Myron Bolitar series about a wisecracking sports agent, as well as stunning stand-alone novels like The Innocent and his breakout thriller Tell No One. His new novel The Woods releases on April 17, 2007.
You, dear reader, are obviously somewhat versed in making online purchases, so today, immediately after you click on the yellow "Add to Shopping Cart" on the top right hand corner of this page, why not do an online search and buy something totally unique? Like, say, a vengeful ghost. That is what rock-star Judas Coyne does, thinking it will be a laugh, fun for his "sick-o" collection of such things. It seems a random buy, but Judas soon learns that it is anything but. This particular ghost is one Craddock McDermott, step-father to recent suicide victim and boy, is he cranky. He demands revenge for his step-daughters death, which he blames on Judass shabby treatment of her. Or is he after something else? There are Amazon readers who will give you a better plot summary. Don't read them too closely because Joe Hill provides plenty of fun surprises. Heart-Shaped Box is a true spine-tingler. I dont use that hyphenated word much anymore. We have seen and read it all, haven't we? But right away, in the first chapter, there was a subtle line that made the hairs on the back of my neck go up in a way I haven't experienced since I first discovered great horror as a teenager. Hill writes with a sure hand. The prose is compelling. Like most memorable tales of horror, this book is more about redemption than scary moments--though Heart-Shaped Box has plenty of scares. They are visceral, shocking and very well done. The characters are flawed and real. The father-son relationship adds texture and surprising poignancy. So here's the thing. My guess is, you wont find a ghost to buy online, but if you read the Heart-Shaped Box, you will be getting something that will haunt you and startle you and stay with you and yes, visit you in your dreams. Sleep well, dear reader. --Harlan Coben
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Product Description
Judas Coyne is a collector of the macabre: a cookbook for cannibals . . . a used hangman's noose . . . a snuff film. An aging death-metal rock god, his taste for the unnatural is as widely known to his legions of fans as the notorious excesses of his youth. But nothing he possesses is as unlikely or as dreadful as his latest discovery, an item for sale on the Internet, a thing so terribly strange, Jude can't help but reach for his wallet. I will "sell" my stepfather's ghost to the highest bidder. . . . For a thousand dollars, Jude will become the proud owner of a dead man's suit, said to be haunted by a restless spirit. He isn't afraid. He has spent a lifetime coping with ghosts—of an abusive father, of the lovers he callously abandoned, of the bandmates he betrayed. What's one more? But what UPS delivers to his door in a black heart-shaped box is no imaginary or metaphorical ghost, no benign conversation piece. It's the real thing. And suddenly the suit's previous owner is everywhere: behind the bedroom door . . . seated in Jude's restored vintage Mustang . . . standing outside his window . . . staring out from his widescreen TV. Waiting—with a gleaming razor blade on a chain dangling from one bony hand. . . . A multiple-award winner for his short fiction, author Joe Hill immediately vaults into the top echelon of dark fantasists with a blood-chilling roller-coaster ride of a novel, a masterwork brimming with relentless thrills and acid terror.
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| Customer Reviews: Read 279 more reviews...
Extremely disappointing October 2, 2008 This book was such a disappointment. I found tedious & repetitive. I found myself waiting for the story to get better.
loved it September 29, 2008 i love this book, i picked it up in the UK on the way back to the US before it was published hear and i couldnt put it down.
Could Not Finish Reading September 24, 2008 0 out of 1 found this review helpful
Whew, I finally quit trying to make myself read faster & just gave up on this book. Rarely do I pick a book that I just can't finish, but this one just didn't work for me. 150 pages into it & it was just painful to keep trying. The premise sounded interesting & it was a good beginning, but then it became monotonous.
Needs a LOT of work September 20, 2008 The initial concept was enthralling enough for me to buy the book. What a disappointment. The protagonist is 54 years old -- a burned out rocker. Then I turned to the back jacket flap, and see that the author is, at most, in his early 30s. What, I wondered, can somebody that young possibly know about being 54 years old, or being a 54 year old burned out rocker, for that matter? Reading the book provided the answer -- almost nothing. I know because I happen to be 54 years of age. For a man that old to be with a girl about 30 years younger than he is, and to have anything whatsoever to hold that relationship together beyond sex (and that didn't really seem to enter into it too much) is ludicrous.
Joe Hill or Joe King or whoever he is has created a cast of shallow characters. I didn't find a single one that I gave even a slight damn about and was relieved when I finished the book.
I also objected to his slang-ridden narrative. Slang is fine when used in dialogue to help express the sort of person speaking, but when it's used narrative, it indicates immaturity and an incomplete grasp of the craft of writing. For example: he uses the work "hoarked" to describe vomiting in the narrative. If his character had said that, it would have been fine. But the way he chose to use it narratively made me shake my head. He writes like a punk, and if you go in for that sort of thing, buy the book. I imagine if you are a male who is 16-24, you'll be all over this tome.
Joe Hill/King had a great idea that he was unable to properly execute. And the fact that it's a first novel doesn't excuse it. I have read many brilliant first novels, and this one couldn't shine their dust jackets.
However, if you are, by any chance, interested in a truly literate and terrifying book, buy yourself a copy of THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE by Shirley Jackson. And don't tell me you saw the movie(s) -- the movie(s) didn't even come close to capturing all the creepiness in the book.
Stephen King "Lite" September 20, 2008 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Joe Hill (real name Joseph Hillstrom King) is following in his daddy's footsteps, one step at a time. And if you don't know who his father is after reading this book, shame on you.
The plot is simple enough. Jude Coyne is an aging rock star in the tradition of Jerry Garcia and Jon Bonham, who is not growing old gracefully. He picks up, uses, and discards Goth girls one after another, calling them by the states they come from. He therefore calls his latest such "conquest" Georgia, although her real name is Marybeth. In keeping with his image, he collects items belonging to or related to dead people. One day he finds an ad on an e-Bay clone advertising a ghost for sale, and he just can't resist.
He should have.
The ghost turns out to be related to one of his past "conquests", and has his own plans for Coyne - which aren't what they appear to be at first glance.
Hill has definitely learned his craft at his daddy's knee. His plotting and style definitely suggest an extremely early Stephen King, and hopefully as the years go along and he puts out more books his talent will grow just as his father's has.
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