Product Details
Once

Once
By James Herbert

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Product Description

Remember the fairy stories you were told as a child? Tales of tiny, magical, winged beings and elves, wicked witches and goblins. Demons ...What if one day you found they were true? What if, when you became an adult, you discovered they were all based on fact? What if you met the fantasy and it was all so very real? That's what happened to Thom Kindred. The wonders were revealed to him. But so were the horrors, for not far behind the Good, there always lurks the Bad. And the Bad had designs on Thom. The Bad would show him real evil. He would see the 'hellhagges' and the demons. He would be touched by perverted passion. And corruption. And he would encounter his own worst nightmare. The Bad would seek to destroy him. And only the magic of the little beings would be able to help him. Once, James Herbert's masterful novel of love, lust and darkest horror, will take you to a realm where fantasy and reality collide, where fairy tales really can come true.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #447051 in Books
  • Published on: 2001-09-12
  • Released on: 2001-09-12
  • Original language: English
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 400 pages

Editorial Reviews

Amazon.co.uk Review
Once is the latest in the welcome new phase of James Herbert's career after he distanced himself from the straightforward "horror" tag afforded to him by earlier novels such as the Rats trilogy and cannily reinvented himself as a writer with considerably more psychological insight and elegance of style.

Trading on a grotesque reinvention of fairy stories, Herbert has his protagonist Thorn Kindred encountering witches, goblins and demons, and being obliged to turn to some very strange sources to save his soul. The new ambitiousness of Herbert's writing may be found in the underpinning of the narrative here: this is a grim and persuasively realised spin on Nietzsche's epigram: "When fighting monsters, beware of becoming one yourself." But long-time readers needn't worry about a lack of grisly chills: Herbert is too fine a writer not to keep us permanently on the edge of our proverbial seats. And he's better than ever at orchestrating his fear-filled climaxes, so that there is a carefully worked out structure to the book that never has the stop-and-start jerkiness of the early novels. Rather in the nature of Sondheim's musical Into the Woods, fairy tale motifs are exploded and reconstituted in this dark and erotic fable. After reading Once, fairy tales will never seem the same again. --Barry Forshaw

Review
Once upon a time there were faeries living in the woods of Castle Bracken. This is the story of Thom Kindred who returns to his childhood home in the woods to recuperate from an almost fatal heart attack. There are many mysteries for Thom to solve, including his heritage, friends who are not all they seem to be and, of course, the faerefolkis themselves. A wonderful read which shows Herbert to be a master of high fantasy as well as horror. Take heed, however, that this book is not for the squeamish or the easily offended as it contains bad language, sexually explicit material and horror of the Herbert kind. (Kirkus UK)

After ringing changes on Victor Hugo in Others (1999), Herbert now takes us to a fairyland decidedly not out of James M. Barrie. Yes, the author does provide some sweetness-and-light and pitter-pattering fairy laughter, but only as they contrast with dark forces of wiccans married to the boiling and shapeless father of darkness. His object is to create a total environment in which the reader can at least half-believe in fairies, elves, undines, and so on, not to mention witches. So he sets before us the Bracken estate with its castle, acres of lawn, deep woods, and rough lanes: an absolutely idyllic landscape for fairies. Thom Kindred, 27, is recovering from a crippling auto accident that resulted from a stroke while driving. His mother worked for Sir Russell Bleeth at Castle Bracken until Thom was seven years old; then she . . . hmm, died? . . . without ever telling Thom who his real father was. Sir Russell, twice a widower and father to big, shapeless, greedy Hugo, lies dying as Thom returns to the estate and takes up life in his mother's abandoned old cottage. He finds himself attended mornings by Nell Quick, a pretty wiccan, it turns out, whose attentions cause dishes to fly off shelves while some kind of elf or goblin scoots about the floor just out of sight. Soon Thom hears strange musical sounds and sees eerie golden lights floating about, and later he finds himself sucked into the world of little spirits and an affair with beautiful Jennet, an undine. But as his mother would have warned him, affairs between mortals and undines can't end happily. Leaf-clogged suspense until a slashing succubus appears to add stress to Thom's recovery. (Kirkus Reviews)

Synopsis
Remember the fairy stories you were told as a child? Tales of tiny, magical, winged beings and elves, wicked witches and goblins. Demons ...What if one day you found they were true? What if, when you became an adult, you discovered they were all based on fact? What if you met the fantasy and it was all so very real? That's what happened to Thom Kindred. The wonders were revealed to him. But so were the horrors, for not far behind the Good, there always lurks the Bad. And the Bad had designs on Thom. The Bad would show him real evil. He would see the 'hellhagges' and the demons. He would be touched by perverted passion. And corruption. And he would encounter his own worst nightmare. The Bad would seek to destroy him. And only the magic of the little beings would be able to help him. Once, James Herbert's masterful novel of love, lust and darkest horror, will take you to a realm where fantasy and reality collide, where fairy tales really can come true.


Customer Reviews

Haunted Fairy Tale4
This James Herbert novel is very different to many of his others and introduces us to Thom Kindred who after a serious accident returns to his childhood home of Little Bracken set deep in the mysterious forest surrounding the stately home of Castle Bracken.

The narrative sets up quite a spooky feeling about the setting and also the both houses. The Characters of Hugo Bleeth and Nell Quick are not who they seem and then we find out that the forest is populated by a whole host of incredible mythical animals and elves and wicked evil creatures from our nightmares and fairy tales that interact with Thom.

The story is very original and sometimes erotic, sometimes menacing; I wouldn't exactly call it Horror, more a good old fashioned haunted love story. Very good none the less.

Hopefully just a blip..1
..but this is by far the worst of Hebert's books that I've read (and I've read most). It starts off as well as any other of his tales, but as soon as the fairies appear, it really does spiral into total drivel.
I was pretty dubious about the whole fairy idea to begin with, but I didn't realise quite how unlikeable they would turn out to be - it got to the point where they made me feel quite nauseous.
I can't imagine what JH was thinking when he came up with the idea for this book, but I share another reader's suspicion that he was suffering from writer's block - an example of his lack of imagination is when he throws in two almost identical and equally mind-numbing scenes with spiders.
However, I do think this is just a blip in JH's career - the excellent 'Others' and 'Nobody True' make this seem likely.
Read these instead and if you want fairies then read Peter Pan.

Fun but Forgettable3
The basic premise of this book is a good one - that traditional childrens' fairy tales can be spiced up to make them appeal to grown-ups. The Grimm Brothers' tales make sinister enough reading and it was a good idea to tweak some well-known images from childhood stories to turn them into disturbing adult fiction.

However, despite some graphic sex scenes and fairly shocking horror (you would expect no less from Mr Herbert) the story never quite grips the reader enough. The characters are a little, well, normal and both good guys and bad guys seemed decidedly hesitant to act with any decisiveness or even subtlety. They're all a bit nerdy to be honest. I found myself wondering why the hero doesn't just take a good piece of 2x4 to the bad guys and lamp them one. When the reader feels able to out-think, out-fight and basically out-hero the hero (with nothing more than stout timber) then something has probably gone wrong somewhere. It all seemed a little rushed and not particularly well thought out.

Having said that, 'Once' has a unique feel to it and is skilfully written. I found myself interested in the story and felt only faintly disappointed that a very good basic plot and flavour was slightly spoiled by the characters and their actions (or lack of). It's worth a read, but the title probably describes how often you'd want to.