14 October 2022

Books: The House Next Door By Anne Rivers Siddons (1978)

“Thirty-something Colquitt and Walter Kennedy live in a charming, peaceful suburb of the newly bustling Atlanta. Life is made up of enjoyable work, long, lazy weekends, and the company of good neighbors. Then, to their shock, construction starts on the vacant lot next door, a wooded hillside they'd believed would always remain undeveloped. Soon, though, they come to realize that more is wrong than their diminished privacy. Surely the house can't be "haunted," yet something about it seems to destroy the goodness of every person who comes to live in it, until the entire heart of this friendly neighborhood threatens to be torn apart.”

Author Anne River Siddons was mostly known for her novels set in the South, being closer to Pat Conroy in tone, than what she was really remembered for, the sometimes complicated world of Chick Books. The House Next Door was her second book and an hundred and eighty degree from her debut (and despite the success of this book, never tried her hand a Gothic horror again). But the book, despite the fact that Stephen King once called it the “Finest horror novels of the 20th Century", and provides a lengthy review of the novel his non-fiction Danse Macabre book, can go either way when it comes to what is exactly happening here. In other words, it’s left up to reader to guess if all the things that occur in the book, in that house, are supernatural or just a case study on our flawed lives.

Yes, the improbably named Colquitt and her husband Walter begin to believe otherwise, but by then I was rushing through the book to get it done. It’s atmospheric in the beginning and the prose is well written, and those who were born and bred in the upper echelon of Southern life, will appreciate it never making fun of the ridiculousness of it all. And since it was published in 1978, the book contains bits of casual racism, homophobia, and deaths of a few pets.

It’s certainly a different kind of haunted house story, but it won’t be for everyone.

No comments:

Post a Comment