Nightshade

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Saul Gets Scarier


John Saul has been terrifying readers for more than two decades, and we keep coming back for more. It's easy to see why when you read his latest tour de force, Nightshade, a chillingly creepy tale that will have you looking over your shoulder every chance you get. Stunningly crafted, with a plot that has more twists than a bag full of pretzels, Nightshade promises to be Saul's most compelling novel yet. And given his backlist of grimly horrifying but riveting fare, that's no small accomplishment.

In a small New England town, Joan Hapgood is content with her life until the events of one fateful afternoon trigger a long string of tragedies that threaten both her future and her sanity. It starts when Joan's mother, Emily, who has been steadily deteriorating under the effects of Alzheimer's disease, accidentally starts a fire while trying to cook. To say Joan's relationship with her mother is strained would be a gross understatement. In Emily's eyes, Joan has always been a poor second to her sister, Cynthia, who was beautiful, devoted, and bright. Despite Cynthia's death many years before, Joan still lives in her big sister's shadow whenever Emily is around. Not only has Joan never been pretty enough, bright enough, or loving enough, but she has a bastard son whose father remains unknown -- all unforgivable sins to Emily.

Against the wishes of her husband, Bill, and her son Matt, Joan moves her mother into the Hapgood family home where she and Bill have lived for ten years. Emily's insistence that Cynthia is not only still alive, but present, combined with her viciously acerbic attitude toward Matt and Joan, strains Joan's marriage to the breaking point, forcing Bill to move out. Given that Bill is the only father Matt has ever known, the boy takes the separation hard, becoming understandably angry. When Bill ends up dead during a hunting trip -- possibly shot by Matt himself -- the town begins to wonder just how angry Matt has become.

The death of Bill Hapgood is followed by several mysterious disappearances, including that of Joan's mother, Emily. In each case, the bulk of the evidence points to young Matt, and soon the entire town is close to forming a lynch mob. Matt himself isn't sure what the truth is, for he keeps suffering odd fugue states and imagining that he sees, hears, and smells his dead Aunt Cynthia. For Joan, the intense grief brought on by her husband's death must be set aside as she fights to prove her son's innocence. But no one suspects the real truth, which is so bizarre, so horrifyingly twisted, it will haunt those who survive forever.

For those who like their plot lines well-crafted and convoluted, Nightshade is sure to please. From the unnerving first pages of the prologue to the final sentence on the last page, Saul tosses in enough red herrings and ambiguities to keep readers guessing. Horror fans won't be disappointed either; while the body count is a bit lighter than in some of Saul's other works, there is plenty of blood and gore to be had, and a ghost or two (or are they?) to liven things up.

—Beth Amos

416 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1,2000

About the author

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John Saul grew up in Whittier California where he graduated from Whittier High School in 1959. He attended several colleges—Antioch, in Ohio, Cerritos, in Norwalk, California, Montana State University and San Francisco State College, variously majoring in anthropology, liberal arts, and theater, but never obtaining a degree.
After leaving college, he decided the best thing for a college dropout to do was become a writer, and spent the next fifteen years working in various jobs while attempting to write a book someone would want to publish. Should anyone ever want to write a novel concerning the car-rental industry or the travails of temporary typists, John can provide excellent background material.

Those years garnered him a nice collection of unpublished manuscripts, but not a lot of money. Eventually he found an agent in New York, who spent several years sending his manuscripts around, and trying to make the rejection slips sound hopeful. Then, in 1976, one of his manuscripts reached Dell, who didn't want to buy it, but asked if he'd be interested in writing a psychological thriller. He put together an outline, and crossed his fingers.

At that point, things started getting bizarre. His agent decided the outline had all the makings of a best-seller, and so did Dell. Gambling on a first novel by an unknown author, they backed the book with television advertising (one of the first times a paperback original was promoted on television) and the gamble paid off. Within a month Suffer the Children appeared on all the best-seller lists in the country and made the #1 spot in Canada. Subsequently all 32 of his books, have made all the best-seller lists and have been published world wide. Though many of his books were published by Bantam/Doubleday/Dell his last fourteen books have been published by Ballantine/Fawcett/Columbine.

In addition to his work as novelist, John is also interested in the theater. He has acted, and as a playwright has had several one-act plays produced in Los Angeles and Seattle, and two optioned in New York. One of his novels was produced by Gerber Productions Company and M.G.M. as a C.B.S. movie and currently one of his novels is in development.

John served on the Expansion Arts Panel of the National Endowment for the Arts. He is actively involved with the development of other writers, and is a lecturer at the Pacific Northwest Writers Conference and the Maui Writers Conference and received the Life Time Achievement Award from the Northwest Writers Conference. John is also a trustee and Vice President of The Chester Woodruff Foundation (New York), a philanthropic organization.

John lives part-time in the Pacific Northwest, both in Seattle and in the San Juan Islands. He also maintains a residence on the Big Island of Hawaii. He currently enjoys motor homing, travel and golf. He is an avid reader, bridge player, golfer and loves to cook.

Community Reviews

Rating(4 / 5.0, 100 votes)
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100 reviews All reviews
April 17,2025
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A good eerie tale about obsession and pure evil. A young woman takes in her toxic mother who refuses to believe that her favorite daughter the oldest child is dead. So she sets out to make life miserable. What I loved was the mystery of what happened to Cynthia and what kind of person she really was. This was another great classic of John Saul!
April 17,2025
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I read a few John Saul books back when I was in high school and was really impressed. That being said, I'm not sure why I only read those scant few. I found this copy of Nightshade at a local thrift store and figured I'd dive back in and see if I still liked his writing.

Nightshade is the story of rival sisters. One is Mother's little darling, the other can do nothing right. Unfortunately for dear old Mom, her favorite, Cynthia, dies suddenly and Mom takes all that hate and heartbreak out on the younger, remaining sibling, Joan. Joan goes on to get married and raise a son. Mother is rewarded with dementia brought on by Alzheimer's. Her illness causes her to see and converse with her dead daughter - or does it? Some things aren't at all what they appear to be and as the story goes the plots spirals deeper into Joan's dark and trouble childhood and the relationship she had with both her mother and her sister.

Nightshade is certainly dark, but there were a few things that just didn't click or make sense to me. It was somewhat predictable and on three occasions Saul used the almost exact same wording to describe a scene. The characters felt rather wishy-washy. I get where Saul was trying to go with them, but in the end, I couldn't quite make that leap of having any emotional attachment to them as a whole. What happens is horrendous and tragic, but I wasn't deeply entrenched in their situation enough to shed a single tear or even gasp or anything. Nor do I at all understand why the relationship between Joan's son and his aunt was so bizarre.

I didn't completely hate the book, mind you. I did want to know what happened and how it all resolved. I just felt a little let down that it was so predictable and unbelievable in the end.
April 17,2025
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Not great but it did keep me reading late into the night...
April 17,2025
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A very good and scary book from John Saul. Difficult to put down because you wanted to find out the twisted plot. Great development of the caricatures thought out the novel. Enjoy.
April 17,2025
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OMG!! This book could so be a movie!! John Saul has done it again, the suspense and twists are amazing!!
April 17,2025
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This book sucks! Did not expect it from John. What a disappointment! It's never a good sign when reading a book makes you want to punch the main character lol but it is what it is..I've enjoyed few other books by this author so hopefully, there'll be better ones in the future
April 17,2025
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So this book isn't that good but I can't stop reading it why is that? I have this psycho thing where I have to read every book I start. I know it's crazy. It makes me read some books I really hate sometimes. This book isn't' one of them though. He wrote a book called homecoming that's good though. Yeah, so I decided I hate this book.
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