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Sweetheart, Sweetheart (1977)

por Bernard Taylor

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1357202,153 (3.79)11
Deep in the English countryside, Gerrard's Hill Cottage promises comfort and peace to all who enter. But beneath its placid surface lurks a demented evil--an aura of murder, madness, and betrayal--taunting, terrorizing, preparing to strike. Taylor is a master.--Publishers Weekly
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Mostrando 1-5 de 7 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I love that Valancourt Books have reprinted so many of the old classic horror novels, making what was once difficult to find in used condition brand new again for a new generation of horror readers.

Previously, the only book I had read by this author was Godsend, so many years ago that I can only remember that I enjoyed it, I will need to reread someday. I had no idea he was such a prolific horror and true crime writer. After reading this one I have made it a point to get hold of several of his other titles and a collection of his short stories.

Sweetheart Sweetheart begins innocently enough, with an underlying tension and a slowly building feeling of unease. David has not heard back from his twin brother recently and begins to feel uncomfortable with the silence. True that David is busy with his new life, and new wife but odd that he has not written in some time. David feels compelled to fly off to England to check on him. His girlfriend thinks he is overreacting but he can not ignore the feeling of dread that compels him to go.

Upon his arrival he is told very coldly and bluntly that his brother is dead and that his father could not be bothered to call him in time for the funeral. Between his father and the locals he is given bits and pieces of the story, laden with rumor and innuendo but little in the way of facts and details. As David settles in to the cottage that has been left to him, he considers making it his permanent home, but the more he learns, the more he wants to know, and the more he finds out the clearer it becomes that there is a danger to staying in the lovely cottage where so much death has occurred. The gradual build up of creeping fear makes the ending that much more shocking. This story was brilliant. It is expertly crafted and perfectly executed. ( )
  IreneCole | Jul 27, 2022 |
(I won't rate this book. I skipped to the end because I had to return it to the library in 2 hrs or else get fined $1/day.)

It starts out very slow with a lot of description of the physical surroundings and the MC meets a lot of people in the new village. It is well-done, but there's not a lot of impetus to the meetings nor is a sense of foreboding developed.

The ending sent shivers up and down my spine and it was truly horrific. After dropping the book off at the library tonight, I couldn't help but constantly turn my head around to check behind me. ( )
  quantum.alex | May 31, 2021 |
Near perfect ghost story. A real treat. ( )
  Lemeritus | Jun 8, 2018 |
David returns home to England to the surprising news that his twin brother and his brother's wife have both recently died in separate freak accidents, and David has inherited their cottage. He moves in with his fiancee but soon begins to feel a presence there with them, and she's jealous.

Another entry in the 1970s horror category, a genre I'm affectionately fond of. This ghost story was not as enjoyable for me as something like Burnt Offerings. Despite one rather gnarly sex scene with a ghost, Taylor never really "goes for it" with this story. He keeps the horror at a pretty low simmer, and the ending twist was, I thought, rather predictable. I also was not fond of Taylor's overuse of dashes and ellipses. Still, I always enjoy the -- what's the word I want? innocence? -- of these early horror novels. They make good summer reads. ( )
2 vota sturlington | Jun 13, 2016 |
I have a confession to make, I was never aware of Bernard Taylor, horror author, until recently that was until I was introduced to his 1977 ghost story, Sweetheart Sweetheart which I understand was chosen by Charles L Grant as one of the 100 best horror novels. The 1970’s saw the emergence and growth of King, Koontz and Herbert with their astounding debuts of Carrie, The Rats and Demon Child (Koontz writing as Deanna Dwyer and this was really his first attempt at Gothic style horror) and yet Bernard Taylor in comparison accomplished no such commercial success....and that is unfortunate because Sweetheart, Sweetheart is one of the best written ghost stories (as distinct from horror) I have ever read.

David Warwick lives in New York with his American wife Shelagh and in David’s own words “Her demands matched my own, mostly, and she never made me feel threatened by any sense of inadequacy.” David has a twin brother who lives in Hillingdon, London and he senses that Colin is in grave danger so purely on instinct he makes the long trip to “Gerald’s Hill” cottage in Hillingdon where he receives some unwelcome and sad news...Colin and his wife Helen have both died suddenly and David is the sole beneficiary of the cottage.....”It was beautiful. Far more beautiful than it had appeared in any of the photographs Colin had sent, and for a while I stayed quite still, relishing my first sight of it. It was all so complete, I thought-so right. There was the tall, steep, peg-tiled roof, with the moss growing in the crevices; there were the dormer windows, the stout stone walls, the roses that climbed the walls and grew in profusion over the gate’s arch; there all the colours of the garden that lay around the house and stretched out, away, beyond; and the very lines of the house itself- not one of them precision-straight-all of them showing the personal touch of the hand –the laying on of stone on tile.”

David cannot understand why he is the beneficiary of the cottage? He questions the mysterious death of Helen who it appears fell from the roof trying to rescue Girlie the cat..why should a pregnant woman attempt to carry out such a foolish act? and what is the reason that Colin drove his sports car so recklessly?....just look at the passion and force in this description...”But I would never see him now, He was dead, I said aloud....”DEAD” and wondered at the fragility of our bodies- and why death should be so final...Wounds, blood spilt, holes in flesh, organs torn –adding up to the ceasing of our being—so that we became just things, soulless, rotting flesh, clay....dead...” Who is the mysterious Jean Timpson who is determined to act as David’s cottage keeper and could Alan de Freyne have possibly been Helen’s secret lover?

This is a ghost story written with real style, panache, and pace and still as readable today almost 40 years later as it was on first publication in 1977.At it's heart is the chilly realization that David Warwick's journey is about sexual obsession with a ghostly ethereal being. Bernard Taylor shows his brilliance by expertly setting the scene, introducing wonderful diverse characters, creating the idyllic and then when you the reader feels it is safe....shattering your dreams. There is a review that refers to the “slow-rolling” story, this misses the point entirely as the pace is essential to the unravelling of this wonderful tale and allows for the author to indulge us, shock us with the unexpected and lead us to a terrific conclusion.

A wonderful read a great example of how a horror story should be written and a real treat for anyone like me who has yet to be introduced to the horrific world of Bernard Taylor. ( )
1 vota runner56 | Nov 22, 2015 |
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Deep in the English countryside, Gerrard's Hill Cottage promises comfort and peace to all who enter. But beneath its placid surface lurks a demented evil--an aura of murder, madness, and betrayal--taunting, terrorizing, preparing to strike. Taylor is a master.--Publishers Weekly

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