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Darkness, Tell Us
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Darkness, Tell Us
Author: Richard Laymon

Book Information
Publisher: Leisure Books
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780843950472 - ISBN-10: 0843950471
Pages: 400


Other Versions of this Book: Paperback

Book Description:
It started as a game. Six college kids at a party. Then someone suggested they try the Ouija board. The board that Corie had hidden in the back of her closet and sworn never to touch again. Not after what happened last time. Not after Jake's death...



They were only playing around, but the Ouija board worked, all right. Maybe too well. A spirit who called himself Butler began to send them messages -- and make demands. Butler promised them a hidden treasure if only they would follow his directions and head off to a secluded spot in the mountains... a wild, isolated spot where anything could be waiting for them. Treasure or death. Or Butler himself.



When horror author Laymon (Island) died in 2001, he left behind several unseen novels (and all signs indicate that he, unlike some other dead authors who continue to publish, actually wrote these books). This newest is middling Laymon-which means that it moves like a bat out of hell and features gobs of titillating sex and jaw-dropping gore, plus a gentle underpinning of emotional truth. Laymon's strength is writing about adolescents; the six highlighted here are college students, three male and three female, who, during a party at the house of one of their professors, are prompted by a Ouija board to look for a "4-T-U-N-E" at a remote California locale, Calamity Peak. Road-tripping there right away, the six students-two of whom mate in the book's affecting romantic subplot-eventually encounter a machete-wielding madman who terrorizes them. Meanwhile, as depicted in cross-cut chapters, the professor and her new lover, concerned about the students' impetuousness, follow the six, only to fall prey to the madman themselves. A skeleton, a family secret, several surprising revelations and two more crazies thicken the plot, which is no more realistic than a fever dream but is embedded in hard reality through the sensuous immediacy of Laymon's prose. Any reader averse to high tension and rampant salaciousness should skip this over-the-top tale, but Laymon fans-an ever-growing group-will embrace it as wild, dirty fun.

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Top Member Book Reviews

A. J. C. (Bibliocrates) wrote on 4/25/2008...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

In this book we have six college kids, Lana, Keith, Doris, Glen, Howard, and Angela, celebrating the end of their summer semester at Corie's place, their professor. They get the Ouija board game out for fun and meet a spirit named Butler. Before they know it they are sneaking off to the mountains on an adventure to look for treasure. Corie is worried about the kids after what happened to her late husband Jake last time she used the Ouija board, so she goes after the kids with Chad, her former brother in law, who just happened to show up on this particular night after disappearing many years ago. Add to the mix some romantic subplots, a few character back stories, and a sadistic madman, and you have a good read. This is not my favorite Richard Laymon, not as much sex and gore as is typical in his books, but still a good read. I would recommend it!

Mary B. (TangoBrat) wrote on 7/16/2007...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

Not as much action as I'm used to from Mr. Laymon but I did enjoy the concept. Good reading!

Sarah T. (sarah5775) wrote on 6/13/2007...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

Wow...Laymon has a real talent for surprising and horrifying you. You will be on the edge of your seat to see who survives and who doesn't. As other reviewers have mentioned, the story concerns a group of college students who set out to find a treasure promised to them by a spirit they contact on a Ougi board. The board directs them to several small treasures and they trust it and head off camping in a deserted part of the woods. Here, they run into danger and the mysterious past of one one of them is revealed- a past which comes back to haunt the students.

A thrilling, exciting read...like all of Laymon's.

Carol N. wrote on 11/5/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

6 College kids plus one Ouija Board equals one terrifying tale of danger, torture, murder and a 15-year mystery solved. This is a seat-of-the pants scarey read!

James S. (Birddog) wrote on 6/7/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

This is a great book, scary, intense and thrilling. The late Richard Laymon is a fantastic author and it is too bad someone is not continuing his work.

Chuck P. (1998SVT) wrote on 1/8/2006...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

A typical Laymon story, a group of college kids play with a Ouija board at a party and set off on an adventure that leads to excitement, terror and death. I enjoyed the book as I do all of Laymons stories. If you aren't one of Richards Laymons fans you probably won't enjoy this book, if you are I'm sure you will like it as much as I did.

Stacy L. (stacyl67) wrote on 9/18/2005...

1 member(s) found this review helpful.

It started as a game. Six college kids at a party. Then someone suggested they try the Ouija board. the board that Corie had hidden in the back of her closet and sworn never to touch again. Not after what happened last time. Not after Jake's death...
They were only playing around, but the Ouija board worked, all right. Maybe too well. A spirit who called imself Butler began to send them messages- and make demands. Butler promised them a hidden treasure if only they would follow his directions and head off to a secluded spot in the mountains...a wild, isolated spot where anything could be waiting for them. Treasure or death. Or Butler himself.


Please Rate these Book Reviews

Amy A. (auerrotts) wrote on 11/14/2009...


Another great Laymon book. A must read if you are a fan. I really enjoyed this one.

JOHN K. (Jack33K) wrote on 11/30/2006...


LAYMON AT HIS BEST.

Katrina B. (kat1969) wrote on 3/27/2006...


Laymon is a great story teller!

Keary M. (matter2me) wrote on 1/3/2006...


excellent!!!!

Nicole M. (CBJPL31) wrote on 12/16/2005...


A good story. Not his best but still good!

Melissa K. wrote on 11/27/2005...


I'd give this book 5 stars of course, love Laymon.

James A. (vonJunzt) wrote on 7/9/2005...


Laymon is the King and even this semi-cliche'd idea of an experiment with a Ouija Board outshines almost everything else! Recommended!


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