Skip to main content
PBS logo
 
 

Search - Treasure Box

Treasure Box
Treasure Box
Author: Orson Scott Card
A shattering childhood tragedy left Quentin Fears devestated and unable to cope with the world and its citizens. It didn't, however, prevent him from making millions through brilliant investments. An now the enigmatic recluse has experienced the extraordinarily unexpected: love at first sight. — But a whirlwind courtship and marriage to Madelei...  more »
ISBN: 314313
Publication Date: 7/1996
Pages: 372
Rating:
  • Currently 3.5/5 Stars.
 1

3.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Harper Torch
Book Type: Paperback
Other Versions: Hardcover, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

ceilmary avatar reviewed Treasure Box on + 12 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 6
This is one of Card's suspense/horror novels, in the vein of "Lost Boys" and "Magic Street"; so if you are a fan of his scifi Ender series, you may not enjoy this book.

But if you also like horror novels, this is a good one...not very gory, not very scary, but the plot is interesting and the writing, as always, is excellent. Quentin Fears, who has become a millionaire recluse, has never really accepted his sister Lizzy's death. He becomes embroiled in a mystery that causes him to deal with his sister's death, his own life, and to look at just what life and death mean, when he falls in love and marries a mysterious woman named Madeline. It turns out to be a terrible mistake, and it might be a fatal one.
reviewed Treasure Box on + 95 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 4
When naive computer-nerd and millionaire Quentin Fears meets the woman of his dreams at a posh Washington, D.C., party and then marries her, he thinks his life is complete. But in this low-key horror novel, appearances can't be trusted and people aren't always in control of their actions. Although Madeleine seems quite sophisticated, there are deficits in her memory and her background is vague. She claims a large, well-to-do family but invites no relatives to the wedding. When Quentin finally meets his in-laws at their palatial Upstate New York mansion, they strike him as eccentric, almost as cartoons of real people. The domineering grandmother, whom Madeleine hates, sits in a trance, eyes closed, refusing to speak. There are hints of past child abuse?and of the possibility that a young boy may have been murdered. Why do so many of Madeleine's relatives have names identical to those buried in the family cemetery? And why doesn't Madeleine leave any footprints in the snow? Although the story moves toward a powerful climax, its primary pleasures are more subtle: strong character development and complex motivations, a mystery to solve, the discovery of wheels within wheels. It's rare that Card, renowned for his science fiction (see the review of his Children of the Mind, below), switches genres. But when he does, here as in his Lost Boys (1992), there's little lost and a rare pleasure gained.
reviewed Treasure Box on
Helpful Score: 3
This book definitely wasn't one of Orson Scott Card's better novels. The first 130 pages were very slow, and I think Card could have summed up Quentin's life and the relationship with Madeleine more efficiently. After the 130 page mark I got excited about the direction the book was taking, and I wondered if it would end up like Palahniuk's Fight Club or Matheson's Somewhere in Time. However, I was quickly disappointed as I kept reading because nothing was really happening. I felt that the book didn't have much a plot until the last few chapters.
I definitely think OSC should stick to writing books with stronger sci-fi/fantasy themes.
Kibi avatar reviewed Treasure Box on + 582 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
From Library Journal
At age 11, Quentin Fears is devastated by his older sister Lizzy's death. Subsequently, he grows up to be a lonely man, obsessed with memories of Lizzy. He becomes extremely wealthy, yet everything he does centers around Lizzy. He even picks a wife who reminds him of her. Madeleine, the woman with whom he falls in love and marries in a matter of weeks, turns out to be an apparition invented by an evil witch. Once the story turns to Quentin's wife and her family, the plot degenerates into the script of a B-movie, with wild explanations for the comings and goings of ghosts and the mysterious treasure box that Madeleine wants her new husband to open. Card, the author of many highly acclaimed works (e.g., Children of the Mind, Tor, 1996) is more handy with quick and witty dialog than story content. There is not enough humor here it to be funny and not enough horror or fantasy for it to be either. Recommended only for large collections.?Shirley Gibson Coleman, Ann Arbor Dist. Lib, Mich.
reviewed Treasure Box on + 50 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Card's tale of the supernatural is very reminiscent of The Lost Boys, but not as good.
Read All 12 Book Reviews of "Treasure Box"

Please Log in to Rate these Book Reviews

donnatella avatar reviewed Treasure Box on + 11 more book reviews
I'm not sure what I expected when I acquired this book. It's definitely not an Ender's Game, but I don't think I expected a horror novel either (if this book were a movie, I never would have watched it, and this is one is kind of horror-lite).

I'm glad I can now clear this book from my shelf, and I could've done without the moralistic final paragraph.
jollymoon avatar reviewed Treasure Box on + 36 more book reviews
Card steps out of his science fiction genre with this harrowing horrer thriller. Great twists, many turns, a little magic. Very nice read with great language skills and descriptions.
reviewed Treasure Box on
Not the usual OSC, but once I got near the end, I loved it. In the middle I was a bit skeptical. Definitely a fun and quick read. Nothing like the Ender series, also not really a "horror" type, more of a bit of mystery and supernatural.


Genres: