Helpful Score: 5
666
That was the hell-black number on the old house that suddenly appeared on Sunset Brook Lane. Inside, a red light flickers from an unseen source...Inside, mocking figures stare down from the windows in a grotesque mimicry of bloody horrors...Inside an ancient supernatural relic waits for human hands to lift it, for human eyes to see its diabolical visions. For this is no ordinary house. This is a house that appears and disappears from time to time, place to place, to haunt the lives of the innocent. A house where the same bloody, dreadful, eternal crime occurs again and again, bringing its victims to the brink of hell, into the hands of the Devil himself. And for Keith and Jennifer Olsen, its door has just swung open...
That was the hell-black number on the old house that suddenly appeared on Sunset Brook Lane. Inside, a red light flickers from an unseen source...Inside, mocking figures stare down from the windows in a grotesque mimicry of bloody horrors...Inside an ancient supernatural relic waits for human hands to lift it, for human eyes to see its diabolical visions. For this is no ordinary house. This is a house that appears and disappears from time to time, place to place, to haunt the lives of the innocent. A house where the same bloody, dreadful, eternal crime occurs again and again, bringing its victims to the brink of hell, into the hands of the Devil himself. And for Keith and Jennifer Olsen, its door has just swung open...
Helpful Score: 2
Well, I suppose I will have to be the first to write a "real" review of this book. It's another horror novel from the 1970's by the same man who brought you "The Amityville Horror". It's about a mysterious house and an even more mysterious owner and the strange goings-on inside of it. It's not exactly a haunted house story, but I'm not sure how else this would be classified. A husband and wife duo become entangled with the house and its occupant(s) when the new house arrives in their neighborhood. There are one or two plot-holes that I would have liked to have had fixed, but for a day's read, it's not bad. It's more than a bit dated, and ever so slightly predictable, but still enjoyable.