Ratings13
Average rating3.7
Harvest Home is a horror story focused on a city family who becomes country dwellers, trying to buy their way into a peaceful life.
The narrator is Ned, the father, and husband who gives up his advertising job and brings his wife and daughter to the farm town of Cornwall Coombe. Their new home appears to answer all their prayers, even offering a homeopathic cure for his teenage daughter Kate. The naturally curious and energetic Ned starts digging too closely into the secrets and customs of their apparently friendly but odd new neighbors.
The scary bits rely on fear of religion or eldritch “ancient' religious practices of the villagers. They feel that what they are doing is right and justified but are savvy enough to realize that “outsiders” wouldn't get it.
There's something a bit Lovecraftian about this, worship of ancient deities, human sacrifices, and brutal punishment against those who break the rules. Things that play on the fears of modern, “rational” people. The difference is instead of fearing immigrants and other races like Lovecraft, Tryon is going for men's fear of women and their “power.” In Harvest Home, female power means witch-like and “closer to nature” and other stereotypes like these.
I don't know how this was taken in the 70s when Tryon wrote it, but some of the female characterizations, the rituals and corn tradtions seemed a little silly to me in 2023. My inability to take some things seriously didn't keep me from enjoying the ride and still finding lot of it unsettling (in the good way a great horror book should be unsettle you).
Ned is a sympathetic narrator, whom I felt bad for as he got so deeply over his head.
That ending was, wow, very cynical and dark.
Overall the story has a slow build-up with a powerful payoff for readers with patience. Harvest Home was one of the books featured in Paperbacks from Hell. I've had a lot of fun looking into these old classics with the guidance of that book.