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Incubus (Ballantine Reader's Circle) |  | Author: Ann Arensberg Publisher: Ballantine Books Category: Book
List Price: $14.00 Buy Used: $0.01 as of 2/10/2010 04:27 EST details You Save: $13.99 (100%)
New (12) Used (46) from $0.01
Seller: Blue_Cloud_Books Rating: 51 reviews Sales Rank: 1963343
Media: Paperback Pages: 336 Number Of Items: 1 Shipping Weight (lbs): 0.7 Dimensions (in): 8 x 5.1 x 0.8
ISBN: 0345438167 Dewey Decimal Number: 813 EAN: 9780345438164 ASIN: 0345438167
Publication Date: May 2, 2000 Availability: Usually ships in 1-2 business days
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Amazon.com Review You can trust Cora Whitman. She's a minister's wife, gardener, food writer, and just the kind of narrator that you don't find in most horror novels. She is practical, skeptical, and her matter-of-fact telling of the events that took place in Dry Falls, Maine, makes this incredible story easy to believe. Incubus begins with Cora Whitman's preface to the "case study" that is the novel. It's an almost scientific warm-up for the paranormal roller coaster that lies ahead. Arensberg's Dry Falls is a typical, small New England community, except during the summer of 1974 when the weather got unusually hot, the rain refused to fall, and the town was gripped by a sinister sexual spirit. The first signs of the incubus were relatively innocent--the town eccentric lost a few hours of her day, husbands became uncharacteristically ardent, schoolgirls saw a "ghost" in a graveyard. As the story progresses, the incubus grows more sinister, until it stirs up a supernatural hurricane with Cora Whitman trapped in its eye. Arensberg, whose other works include Group Sex and Sister Wolf, has created a sophisticated work of literary horror with Incubus. She raises many questions about religion, marriage, and the supernatural, and handles the subject matter with unflinching objectivity. Her prose is simultaneously elegant and pointed, and her characters both unusual and familiar, making the story irresistible. --Mara Friedman
Product Description Dry Falls, Maine was a simple farming town. Its residents lived innocently in sync with the seasons--honest churchgoing folk who looked to the land for a living and to tiny St. Anthony's church for spiritual sustenance. Until the spring of 1974, when a premature, blistering heat wave envelops the vicinity . . . along with something far more sinister. As crops wither, livestock birth only deformed offspring, and husbands lose all desire for sex, an ancient, unholy evil hungry for lust, an Incubus, secretly begins to prey on the town's women. As one female after another falls victim to erotic nightmares and dark violations, Cora Leiber, the wife of St. Anthony's rector, must look for answers in the depths of faith-- and her own tormented soul.
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Showing reviews 1-5 of 51
Incubus November 29, 2007 Fahd El-farissi (Ohio) I am currently reading this book and find it fascinating. I think that the author's story telling is accurate for the surroundings in which the novel takes place: a small town. The local gossip, the endless descriptions and the drawn out passages make the reading more enjoyable. I also find that it is not a traditional book of horror. It is a horror novel in a different way but is well written and worth the read.
Quite entertaining in a Shirley Jackson way October 7, 2007 G. DeJulio (Wynantskill, NY) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
Ann Arensberg has written a very good supernatural thriller in "Incubus", a book which relies moore on atmosphere and character development/interaction then in pacing and plot driven scares.
"Incubus" is written in the Shirley Jackson tradition of cool, straight ahead and level headed narration. Cora Whitman Lieber is the narrator, the wife of an Episcopalian minister whose serene life is muddled somewhat due to her dysfunctional family situation and her husband's lack of interest in the physical part of marriage. Her husband appears to be growing tired of his life as a priest and is increasingly becoming fixated on supernatural phenomena in an attempt to prove that there is "something else" out there. Cora, a food reviewer for a series of magazines mixes these facts in with lessons on horticulture, food preparation and vignettes on the other residents of Dry Falls Maine who attend St. Anthony the Hermit, her husband's church.
"Incubus" is about a series of paranormal events that occur in Dry Falls Maine from April-September 1974. A permanent heatwave/drought descends on the town despite normal weather everywhere else, men lose and sudden regain their sexual ardor and the women of the town are subjected to attacks from something...
To tell the reader any more would be to ruin a cracking good book. Cora Whitman Lieber is a believable narrator who never raises her tone during the novel, even when she becomes the victim of the unexplainable. Her husband is presented as an overall good man complete with faults and other warts that render him human and believeable. The other characters are so believebaly rendered that the reader can make comparisons to those they know in real life, from the shrewish sister to the wise, didactic, sexually ambiguous older friend of the Lieber's, an antique dealer with a knowledge of the supernatural, the ditzy/sexy new age parish secretary and the psychic whose gift sometimes works but is a first rate real estate agent.
The novel is presented in the form of a case study, told in a cool, straightforward style perfected by Shirey Jackson in her wonderful works "The Haunting of Hill House" and "We have always Lived in the Castle." Unlike Jackson, Ms. Arensberg's work misses a five star rating due to the length of her book. This book clocks in at 322 pages hardcover, not a large novel but one that could easily be reduced by 20 pages. Ms. Arensberg's horticultural and culinary descriptions are sometimes bloated and take away from the events that occur in her book. That being said, the last 90 pages of the novel are first rate bordering on extraordinary.
I heartily recommend this novel to any true horror fan as a wonderful study in atmosphere and character development. If you favor novels by Shirley Jackson, Ruchard Matheson, Ray Russell and Anne Rivers Siddon, particularly "The House Next Door", then "Incubus" will be your cup of tea.
STINKUBUS March 17, 2006 Michael Butts (Martinsburg, WV USA) 2 out of 4 found this review helpful
Whether this book is supposed to be a "horror" novel or not makes no difference. It's about as exciting and/or interesting as going to the laundromat. The narrator is self-centered and not entirely objective and there's not really a character in the whole book that I liked. Arenberg spends her time dealing with the sexual frustrations of a bunch of Peyton Place wannabes and her incubus terror is more humorous than frightening. A real overblown farce.
Not for the vapid February 26, 2006 Stevo (New Salem, NC USA) 1 out of 1 found this review helpful
I took a flyer on this novel because the it has an interesting (to me) title and the author is Ivy league educated. I figured "even if the plot is stupid, at least the prose will be well crafted."
My take after reading: this is a REALLY good book. The writing is excellent and descriptive. The author's understanding of personality defects brings the characters alive and the story is original.
For me, finding this novel was like discovering a rare coin in the jar I throw my change into at the end of the day.
Intellectual horror or bored adults? February 10, 2006 Kris (Oxnard, CA) 0 out of 2 found this review helpful
Other reviewers on this site have called this book "intellectual horror," or something similar. It may be that, categorically, but I didn't find it frightening at all.
It's more like reading one of Cora's food columns in the newspaper than a horror story, since she focuses often on food, furniture, local flora, and such.
I've never been to Maine, so it was a little difficult to identify with some of the climactic descriptions, such as an unexpected hot spell.
The impression I had of Cora, her husband, and their friends and associates, is that of a group of adults somewhat bored with their lives, looking for excitement, and with a tendency toward the supernatural. The author admits this, too, in several part of the book.
Reading this novel falls somewhere between a chore and a light entertainment. At no point did I become wrapped up in the plot or want to continue reading to find out what would happen next. I just kept plodding along until I came to the end, when an incubus apparently attacks Cora and Henry, her husband, then performs an exorcism in their church.
That's the whole story, sorry. Diximus.
Showing reviews 1-5 of 51
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