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Happy Man: A Tale of Horror
Happy Man: A Tale of Horror | Eric C Higgs
2 posts | 2 read | 1 reading | 2 to read
Charles Ripley has a good job as an engineer, a pretty wife, and an expensive house in a fashionable San Diego suburb. But it isn't until Ruskin Marsh moves in next door that Ripley realizes how passionless his life really is. Marsh, a connoisseur of the arts, high-powered lawyer, model husband and father, and effortless seducer of women, is so supremely alive that Ripley finds himself irresistibly drawn to him.But after Marsh's arrival, local girls begin to vanish, marriages end violently, nights are split with endless, desperate screams, and horribly mutilated corpses are found. Soon Ripley becomes caught up in an accelerating maelstrom of sex, drugs, violence, and ghastly, unimaginable rites . . . and begins to see the beauty of life.From its profoundly unsettling first pages, Eric C. Higgs's The Happy Man (1985) reveals the nightmare underside of the American dream and brilliantly echoes the Gothic horror tradition of Edgar Allan Poe and Roald Dahl. This new edition features an introduction by the author."The Happy Man is an essential '80s horror read: smart, sharp, unforgiving, unlike anything else in the genre." - Too Much Horror Fiction"[A] grisly shocker, understated for the most part but carrying the impact of a fist to the stomach . . . a most promising debut." - San Diego Union"A thoroughly engrossing Gothic horror story." - South Bend Tribune
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review
Michael_Gee
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Pickpick

Everything is peachy and very 1980s California in Charles Ripley‘s life until a sexy couple move in next door. Suddenly everything seems dull & meaningless, especially compared with the pure id next door. Charles so badly wants to feel in touch with whoever he REALLY is that he is easily polluted by the Marshes. There‘s some intriguing sexual transference that goes on in this book. Fun read, esp keeping in theme with Tender is the Flesh.

Reggie This sounds great! Stacked! 3y
16 likes2 stack adds1 comment
review
JoeMo
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Mehso-so

This was a good, but not great read...this was a fast-paced, absorbing book that lost steam by the end. Our protagonist, Charles, develops a bit of a man crush on Ruskin, his new neighbor. Why? Ruskin can talk about art, seems to be genuinely happy, and has mastered the art of not giving a f***! The budding bromance ends up leading Charles to deep, dark places of the soul. It lacked the emotional weight for the subject matter and ending.

rather_be_reading welcome to litsy 📚☕📚 #litsywelcomewagon 4y
JoeMo @rather_be_reading thanks for rolling out the welcome mat...I‘ve only been here for a week and I have to say it‘s been a wonderful experience! 4y
Eggs Welcome to Litsy 🥳 4y
7 likes1 stack add3 comments