Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - The Houngan

The Houngan
The Houngan
Author: J.N. Williamson
"A Corporate Nightmare" Wan Cerf was unemployed and desperate. When offered an ad writing job with the huge DeSilvier Company, he jumped at it. Puzzled at first by the bizarre atmosphere in the office, hediscovered that his fellow employees were memebers of a mysterious cult. Then he was forced to join the rite to keep his job. Soon he dev...  more »
ISBN: 304284
Publication Date: 1980
Pages: 304
Rating:
  ?

0 stars, based on 0 rating
Publisher: Leisure
Book Type: Paperback
Members Wishing: 1
Reviews: Member | Write a Review
Read All 1 Book Reviews of "The Houngan"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

reviewed The Houngan on + 35 more book reviews
A houngan is a male Voodoo priest. Van Cerf is a divorced father of a twelve-year old boy and unemployed. Van is an advertising writer who has struggled finding satisfaction in his work environment from the various employers he's had through the years. As a result, he finds himself with bills mounting and his confidence at ever finding a job that's fulfilling, emotionally and financially, dwindling. In a last ditch effort, Van calls upon an ex co-worker, who has taken a job with the DeSilvier Corporation, and discovers that she loves working there, but she tells him that they have so little turnover that they rarely ever are hiring. Undeterred, he drops in an attempt at securing an interview. In what seems to be a twist of fate, he's able to meet with one of the Vice Presidents, Doyle Munro. After answering some unorthodox questions, Van is hired. He soon learns that the president of the corporation is Horace DeSilvier, a charismatic houngan that prides himself that his company has so little turnover due to their employee-friendly "family" environment. The question is, is that really why the turnover is low or is there something more sinister involved? Is voodoo the peaceful religion that DeSilvier portrays and has introduced to Van or is there more than meets the eye?

Williamson's writing is very reminiscent of Charles L. Grant, another prolific writer from the 1980s. The Houngan is a slow burn for the first 2/3 of the story as it sets everything in place for the final 1/3. The character development is solid and you're invested in Van's plight as he attempts to discover what is really going on at DeSilvier. The ending is just ok. But, The Houngan is a solid read. 3 1/2 stars.


Genres: