Review: Creepers by David Morrell

Review: Creepers by David Morrell

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Description (from Amazon.com)

On a cold October night, five people gather in a run-down motel on the New Jersey shore and begin preparations to break in to the Paragon Hotel. Built in the glory days of Asbury Park by a reclusive millionaire, the magnificent structure—which foreshadowed the beauties of art-deco architecture—is now boarded up and marked for demolition.

The five people are “creepers,” the slang term for urban explorers: city archeologists with a passion for investigating abandoned buildings and their dying secrets. On this evening, they are joined by a reporter who wants to profile them—anonymously, as this is a highly illegal activity—for a New York Times article.

Frank Balenger isn’t looking for just a story, however. And after the group enters the rat-infested tunnel leading to the hotel, it becomes clear that he will get much more than he bargained for. Danger, terror, and death await the creepers in a place ravaged by time and redolent of evil.

The darkest secrets live in places you’re not supposed to be.


3 stars

My Thoughts

In 1984 (I think), I read David Morrell’s First Blood. I was captivated, amazed, in awe. I hadn’t watched the movie, so I didn’t know what to expect, nor had I read any reviews of the book. It was just something I picked up on the shelf at my local Waldenbooks–and completely out of my reading genre.

I should say my “reading age,” as well. I was 12.

Since then, I hadn’t read anything else by Morrell. I bounced between horror and fantasy, science fiction and science fact. So when I was last at the library, perusing the aisles, I picked up Creepers. Morrell fascinated me as a kid. Could he do the same 27 years later, especially as this novel won the Horror Writers Association Stoker Award?

Apparently not.

Between static characters I’d met somewhere before, a setting I’d visited a few hundred times, themes of greed and time I know I’d read before, Creepers was, in a word, disappointing. I’ve marked it 3 stars simply because it was–in a Scooby Doo sort of way–entertaining, and I really like being entertained. (In fact, I swear at least two characters would have fit perfectly into a Scooby Doo episode, and don’t think I didn’t imagine the big dog stumbling to the rescue in at least one not-so-tense scene.)

I will likely try other Morrell novels to see if this was just an anomaly. I’d like to think so.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0057AE6Z8/


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