Halloween will never be the same . . . Halloween night, 1963, in De Pere, Wisconsin, and all is not well. Evelyn Schmidt's life is almost at an end. she has cancer and has been given only days to live, But she'll be damned if she'll go quietly, in the hospital or at home. She's heading for the Idle Hour to drink up a storm, whether her fellow drinkers want her there or not. Steve Omsted is only sixteen, but he feels his life might as well be over already. He's on academic probation, he's been kicked off the football team, and now his girlfriend has dropped him. He's looking for a convenient target for his rage and has set up a nighttime ambush for his victim. Chuck Williams feels his life has hardly even started yet, but he can't wait any longer. he'll go trick-or-treating, but he won't be waxing windows like his fellow fifth-graders. he's going to hang out with the older kids and cause some real trouble. As the evening unfolds, the paths of these characters and others converge in a series of shocking events that will change the lives of everyone involved. In stark language and with bold, cinematic vision, John Dixon delivers a stunning portrait of a small town at war with itself. This book is #5 in the Visible Spectrum Series, which focuses on new and inventive work in fiction, graphic art, photography, poetry, and cultural criticism.
This short novel is an uncompromising study of social dynamics in interlocking groups of children, teenagers, and adults in a small town on an extremely eventful night. A foolish murder plot, its concealment, a moving attempt to foil it, and its execution and aftermath provide the suspenseful through-line. The different age groups are delightfully characterized but the point of the novel lies in the universality of the drives they have in common. The style is mostly a highly effective just-the-facts objectivity. This objectivity extends even to the use of a "real time" technique, where every moment in a block of time seems to be accounted for; this can be effective but can also try the reader's memory and patience. Though the author's intellectual agenda sometimes gets in the way of his story (leading to some symbolic actions that jar against the overall hyper-realism), his relentless concentration on the pain of exclusion and the torments of loneliness gives this book a primal power that makes a lot of literature seem tepid.
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