Ratings5
Average rating3.6
The bestselling debut from the award-winning author of Life Sentences. “A contemporary ghost story that will chill you to your bones.” —Bustle Both an eerie contemporary ghost story and a dread-inducing psychological thriller, The Dead House features Maggie Turner, a successful young artist who has had bad luck with men. Her last put her in the hospital and, after she’s healed physically, left her needing to get out of London to find a place of quiet that will restore her creative spirit. On the rugged west coast of Ireland, perched on a wild cliff side, she spies the shell of a cottage that dates back to Great Famine and decides to buy it. When work on the house is done, she invites her dealer to come for the weekend to celebrate along with a couple of women friends, one of whom will become his wife. On the boozy last night, the other friend pulls out an Ouija board. What sinister thing they summon, once invited, will never go. Ireland is a country haunted by its past. In Billy O’Callaghan’s hands, its terrible beauty becomes a force of inescapable horror that reaches far back in time, before the Famine, before Christianity, to a pagan place where nature and superstition are bound in an endless knot. “A solid addition to the treasury of campfire ghost stories.” —The Wall Street Journal “Atmospheric and unsettling, The Dead House takes the traditions of classic ghost stories and builds on them with a contemporary twist. A terrific read.” —John Boyne, New York Times–bestselling author “Chilling, beautifully written.” —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
Reviews with the most likes.
A night of fun and games... that is all it was. Just a little bit of harmless fun, at least that is what the group gathered together thought. After the weekend is over and everyone disperses back to their homes, things begin to change, and not for the better.
Maggie bought the house looking for some peace and quiet after a horrid relationship went very wrong. Healing from her wounds, both physical and mental, she throws herself into painting. But after the Ouiji board, her life begins to spin out of control, and she begins to lose contact with her friends.
Mike is doing his best to keep busy, but his fear for what Maggie is going through continues to grow. When he goes to look for her and finds her very changed, his fear becomes something more. After discussion with his girlfriend, they go back to check on Maggie, only to find her house in ruins...
But the master has not forgotten the rest that was there...
This was a great book! I loved it! I sat and read through it in one sitting! Perfect for a rainy afternoon!
This is a tale both beautiful and terrifying as related by one of the main protagonists and narrator, Michael Simmons. Set mainly near the townland of Allihies, located at the western tip of Ireland's Beara Peninsula, the story, told in three parts and a final epilogue, centers around Mike and three women, Maggie, Alison and Liz, and the one dangerously fateful decision they make at Maggie's weekend housewarming get together. All four come from the Art world. Mike and Alison have successful careers as art dealers, he in London and she in Dublin. Liz, is a poet and personal friend of Maggie. Maggie, like a younger sister to Mike, is a talented artist who was Mike's discovery and has proved her talent over the years Mike has known her. However, Maggie has poor taste in men and her last abusive boyfriend beat her so badly that she had to be hospitalized. With her art career in a slump and making the final recovery from her beating, Maggie decides to take time for herself and wander the Irish countryside. It is during this time that she spies an isolated run down oceanside stone cottage sitting below a slope near Allihies. She immediately falls in love with the cottage and surrounding costal vistas and contacts a real estate agent in order to purchase and and repair the cottage. A word of warning from the agent is the first note of unease in this tale of haunting terror - “This place has been empty a long time. Too long to be natural, really. And people talk. It's lonely out here, the kind of place where it'd be too easy to glimpse things.” But Maggie seeing artistic inspiration in the area and a chance to be alone to make a recovery from her recent bout with violence, borrows money from Mike to buy and refurbish the cottage. With the repairs complete and during a warm summer weekend, Maggie invites Mike, Alison and Liz to come for a housewarming party. She also has plans as matchmaker to bring Alison and Mike together; a plan that is actually successful in that romance does bloom and Mike and Alison will eventually marry and have a little girl years later. After a wonderful weekend together traveling the countryside, it is on the last candlelit evening, with liquid spirits flowing, that the four, with Liz's urging, take part in something that will open them all up to things best left alone. Though never boring, O'Callaghan takes his time, using beautiful, descriptive prose to unwind this unsettling ghostly tale that also manages to include a love story.