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Review: Snowman/The Terror

                     

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Snowman & The Terror (double volume) by Graham Masterton

Snowman & The Terror

By Graham Masterton

 

Visit the official Graham Masterton website

Snowman and The Terror.

Okay, we are not talking one book here, but two; my copy was a double volume. Both stories are about a dedicated English teacher called Jim Rook. Jim's not only adept at dealing with the metaphor and the simile, though, the guy can pretty much deal with any problem that comes his way, whether it comes from downtown, uptown, of the deepest bowels of hell. Jim had a near death experience when he was a child and now he, quite literally, sees dead people.

 

I am a big fan of Graham Masterton and have read quite a few of his novels. I have enjoyed them all. I enjoyed both these stories too.

 

Snowman is the first story. There is something invisible on campus; something that can freeze things very quickly and very thoroughly. First it is just the water fountain, then it is the whole of the men's room, but when whatever it is starts on his students Jim is forced to act. He must find out what is doing it and why. Once he knows that, he needs to find out how to stop it, and the answers that he seeks can only be found in the barren, frozen wastes of Alaska.

 

The Second story is The Terror, and it is actually my favorite of the two. The trouble starts when a new student arrives in Jim's class. At first Rafael Diaz is quiet and keeps himself to himself, but then he reveals a strange talent - he can cure people of their fears. Sandra is the first to be cured. She had Arachnophobia, but Rafael changed all that. He relieved some of the other students of their fears too. Then Jim's students started dying.

 

This alone would be worry enough for anyone, but Jim has other problems too. His cat, Tibbles, seems to have returned from the grave, bringing with her a bad attitude and vicious tendencies, and Jim wonders if his former love, Susan might also be planning a return.

 

I liked the stories - I've already told you that. It was a double volume - I've told you that too. The thing was, when I was reading the second story Jim bought a pink Cadillac. Okay, not exactly masculine colours, but what the heck? He got it cheap. When I read the first story though, he had already got rid of the pink Cadillac. Strange, I thought. I had a closer look at my book and the first story in it, Snowman, is Rook 4, and the second story, The Terror, is Rook 3. For some unknown reason, the publishers have bound them together in the wrong order.

 

The fact that I ended up reading the stories in the wrong order did not cause any problems though. The stories stand alone. I have never read Rook 1, and that caused no problems for me either, although I do plan to buy Rook 1 and read at some future date.

 

I don't want to be too critical here, but I did find quite a few typo's in the books, and when I encountered them they did tend to pull me out of the story a little. Bearing in mind that fact that the stories were not so much back-to-back as back-to-front, I am inclined to wonder if the spelling mistakes didn't originate at the printing presses too.

 

List of Graham Masterton books reviewed on this site

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