Identify Epithetical Books Walkers

Title:Walkers
Author:Graham Masterton
Book Format:Paperback
Book Edition:First Edition
Pages:Pages: 345 pages
Published:1991 by Time Warner Paperbacks (first published September 1989)
Categories:Horror. Fiction
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Walkers Paperback | Pages: 345 pages
Rating: 3.89 | 1161 Users | 89 Reviews

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Ah, Mr Masterton. People think horror, they think King, Straub, Herbert, Barker, etc. I think that Graham Masterton should be up there as a...ahem, master. He constantly writes tight, gripping, balls-to-the-wall horror. Walkers is no exception. Jack narrowly avoids running down a child in a grey hooded jacket, and pursues the figure into the woods on foot. He there discovers a grand building, unseen from the road and instantly falls in love with it. With plans to covert the dilapidated house into a country club, he starts to inquire about it. Unfortunately, The Oaks used to be a home for the criminally insane, and inside the crumbling walls, the one hundred and thirty five maniacs still reside, despite all the inmates mysteriously vanishing one night in 1926. On an impromptu inspection of the place, Jack finds that his son is missing, like he's vanished into the walls themselves... This is the perfect amalgamation of two Masterton books I have previously read: The House That Jack Built and Ritual. In Ritual, we have a desperate father trying to save his kidnapped son, and in House, we have the wonderful sprawling haunted house akin to The Haunting. Walkers has elements of both. First off: gore. Lovely, lovely gore. Masterton sets up a strong cast of supporting characters, which will always prove to be lots of meat for the grinder. He even lets the chaos run free, so that no one in Milwaukee is safe! This gives us plenty of mini stories within the plot were we see everyday characters meeting various sticky ends. I love it when books do this! I think the biggest plus point in this story is that we start with standard, yet very atmospheric, very creepy haunted house fare. While I appreciate haunted house novels (and as people who follow my reviews will know, they crop up a fair bit) the big reveal is usually...ghosts. While this may be the case here, Masterton gives them a very unique spin on how they exist and how they can attack and kill. The result is an enigmatic blend of, say the movies 1000 Maniacs and Tremors! I'll admit that some parts may border on the far-fetched, but it all adds to the fun. The pace is on the nose and it never lets up. What I call the squeam-factor is there in spades. Trust you, Graham! The edition I read was part of an omnibus alongside Ritual, one of the most squeamish books I've ever had the pleasure of reading. Together, and due to their refusal to be put down, this is one of my favourites. Any horror fan should let their hair down, settle in and have some fun with this little gem. Highly recommended.

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ISBN: 0751507318 (ISBN13: 9780751507317)
Characters: Jack & Randy Reed, Father Bell, Quintus Miller
Setting: United States of America


Rating Epithetical Books Walkers
Ratings: 3.89 From 1161 Users | 89 Reviews

Notice Epithetical Books Walkers
A damn good read, a great and original idea (Masterton loves his ancient magic, esp Indian, and here the Druidic). The ending rather fast paced, almost panicky, but really really enjoyable.



A fantastic read. I first read this years and years ago and thought it was about time to blow off the dust and give it another outing. I wasn't disappointed. It was just as good as I remembered and, in my opinion, is one of Masterton's finest.

Ah, Mr Masterton. People think horror, they think King, Straub, Herbert, Barker, etc. I think that Graham Masterton should be up there as a...ahem, master. He constantly writes tight, gripping, balls-to-the-wall horror.Walkers is no exception.Jack narrowly avoids running down a child in a grey hooded jacket, and pursues the figure into the woods on foot. He there discovers a grand building, unseen from the road and instantly falls in love with it. With plans to covert the dilapidated house into

Jack stumbles upon an abandoned mansion in Wisconsin. He wants to convert it into an upscale country club and resort. He puts in an offer to anonymous owners and they accept. He finds out it used to be a nursing home/ asylum. many of the patients disappeared without a tract. As the remodeling of the property is under way, strange, scary things begin to happen. Research on the location link it to the convergence of powerful supernatural lines of the earth.

Don't let the cheesy cover art fool you -- I immediately regretted judging this particular boom by it's cover! I thought it was going to be a delightfully corny 80's horror story and it was actually creepy enough to make me contemplate sleeping in my chair instead of walking down the hallway to my bedroom. Creepy houses with people in the walls? Brr.

Definitely compelling and scary in parts, Walkers (which I think should have been titled Earth Walkers) has a bit of a weak ending but still a very good read. Part haunted house, part urban horror, Walkers sometimes misses out on character study for the book's length. Shorter books have no time for extensive chunks of backstory, which makes them fast and hard, like Charnel House, but a book of this length wasted time with a lot of random killings which the reader knows about without the