  List Price: $13.95 Lowest Price: $7.89 
 Product Description: Rolf Rudolph Deutsch is going die. But when Deutsch, a wealthy magazine and newpaper publisher, starts thinking seriously about his impending death, he offers to pay a physicist and two mediums, one physical and one mental, $100,000 each to establish the facts of life after death.
Dr. Lionel Barrett, the physicist, accompanied by the mediums, travel to the Belasco House in Maine, which has been abandoned and sealed since 1949 after a decade of drug addiction, alcoholism, and debauchery. For one night, Barrett and his colleagues investigate the Belasco House and learn exactly why the townfolks refer to it as the Hell House.
 Customer Reviews: Rating:  Date: 2008-06-27 The foundation for Haunted Houses Everywhere In order to fully appreciate and enjoy this book, you should really try to read it prior to watching any of the movies made about it. Unfortunately I had seen "The Legend of Hell House" back many years ago, so I was familiar with what would happen. Although the book and the movie were different in parts, the truth behind the haunting was the same, which took some of the shock out of it for me.
Short Synopsis: An eccentric dying millionaire commissions a study to prove that there is life after death. Offering On hundred thousand dollars to three people to go and stay the week at "Hell House" and report back to him whether or not there is an afterlife. The three people who go include a psychic medium, a physicist, and the lone survivor of the previous expedition into the house. The four of them go to the house (they fourth being the Physicists wife) and are scheduled to stay there for a week; right away the chills begin crawling up your spine as you learn the depraved history of the house. The windows are bricked up, fog and mist surrounds the house, and the tales of what when on inside are sick and evil.
As I stated before, I wish that I had read this book before having seen the movie, because I believe that having seen the movie detracted from my enjoyment. Still this book is very well written, and was groundbreaking for the time. The problem is that this book was written in the 1970's and has been ripped off or blatantly copied in so many books and movies since then, that when you read it.. it's not shocking anymore. I imagine that this book was quite chilling for it's time. Though I was never terrified, I was interested from beginning to end. And the ghosty in this book is smart... that is probably why this book was so frightening to so many... the battle versus the house was both physical and mental. Certainly we can all duck a few flying dishes... but how do you combat madness? How do you fight an enemy that can see into your very soul, and twist your memories, desires, and hopes into weapons against you?
This could have very easily been a 5 star book, however I found the writing to be very sparse and the characters to be somewhat unsympathetic. At times you almost feel as if you are reading a TV script, the blocking and dialogue are there, but the emotion hasn't shown up yet. In the opening of the book this is at its worst, to the point of my not even being able to distinguish between the two men even by name for much longer into the book than it should have taken. About halfway into the book, Matheson seems to hit his stride and goes from telling to showing the reader what is going on. The second half of this book is 5 star material, without a doubt. I would recommend this book to anyone who enjoys a good haunted house tale.
Rating:  Date: 2008-06-25 Flawless, Creepy Novel By A Master of The Craft.
If you want to see how a master storyteller makes it looks so easy on the page, then really you could read anything by Richard Matheson. But, Hell House is one creepy read that you won't forget any time soon; and it was written back in 1971-you have to remember that while reading it; the book stands the test of time and reads like it could have been written today-it's that good.
Two mediums, a doctor and his wife, enter a haunted house with a reputation for the most evil goings on back in its day. Emeric Belasco, a tall, haunting figure of evil, sporting macabre orgies and directing his guests to indulge in evrey perversion they could think of. Sound familiar? Many, many contemporary authors have used what Matheson created as a blueprint for the haunted house horror story.
The novel progresses as each person in the house succumbs to its sinister needs and desires: which seem to be to either kill, or drive every person insane who tries to staunch the flow of evil within the house.
Matheson has created a horror novel that will be read for many years to come; it's survived this long, since the early seventies, I'm sure it will go on much longer.
Read why Stephen King said that no other writer influenced him more than Richard Matheson-and why Hell House, is the scariest haunted house story ever written. Rating:  Date: 2008-06-09 Hill House was spooky, Hell House is frightening This is the classic haunted house theme: a small group of people wish to spend the night in a house alleged to be haunted for the purpose of paranormal investigation. Matheson did not invent this theme. It seems to have begun with Shirley Jackson's THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE, published 12 years earlier.
One could say that Matheson's HELL HOUSE is a reinvention of Jackson's story, as if Matheson recognized the genius of the original but was frustrated that it didn't explore all its potential. HELL HOUSE, therefore, is far more graphic than Jackson's Hill House, describing intense sexual encounters with ghosts (including violent rape), possession, moving objects, mummies, defiled religious icons, trickery, strange noises, a vegetable soup of psychic phenomena, fog, bog, and all the other ghost story trappings.
What it shares with THE HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE is that four characters spend several nights in a very old haunted mansion to investigate it, some being psychic, while a couple of minor characters serve them by dropping off supplies but not staying around. From there, the stories go their separate ways. In keeping with Matheson's style, HELL HOUSE has one foot in a supernatural explanation and one foot in a quasi-scientific explanation for the phenomena. The narrative isn't as eloquent as Jackson's. Matheson has a strong command of language but he usually suppresses it, choosing to serve steak and potatoes instead of a gourmet casserole. But in so doing, he beats at the reader with scenes that chill, shock, disturb, and creep.
Each character enters the house with preconceptions about what to find there. The leader, Dr. Lionel Barrett, believes that the house is just a house and there are no such things as dead souls that can possess it. He believes, rather, that people emanate an electromagnetic energy of different strengths, and that this agent can "cling" to the guts of a house long after the people have left it. He has built a career studying these energies, and intends to use a machine of his invention to cleanse the so-called HELL HOUSE of this phenomena. His wife, Edith, accompanies him. She enters the house with an open mind, not believing, nor entirely disbelieving, any particular theory, but hoping to get in and get out without seeing anyone get hurt. For other investigative teams in the house had not come out unscathed. A psychic actress, Florence, joins the team to help Barrett explore the house telepathically. She is deeply Christian but also has a strong belief in ghosts and telepathy. She believes the house is haunted by Emeric Belasco, the man who built the place and who held private parties here in which the most outlandish and horrible activities took place, and she comes to believe that it is also haunted by Emeric's son Daniel, who is trapped and controlled by his father. Fischer is the fourth member of the team, said to be the most powerful medium on record, and the only person ever to have survived Hell House without ending up institutionalized. He does not know what is going on, but he looks at the house itself as pure evil, and extremely dangerous. He is back not to take revenge on the house, but to find closure, and yet fear keeps him from using his powers to help the team until it's almost too late.
One of my favorite scenes is when the ghost of Belasco shows up to greet Florence for the first time. She is not afraid of him, perfectly aware of him as he enters her room like an "invisible man." To make himself "seen" he flings the sheet off the bed so that it drapes over him tightly. Florence can then see him turn his head and seem to look at her. Very creepy. The ghost later shows up on her bed with the sheet over him so tightly that she could see his male nakedness, in order to arouse her. It gets worse from there, and her fear of him grows.
The sittings are positively eerie, especially when tentacles of plasma slowly issue from the psychic's nostrils while under a spell, and explore through the room, shaping into faces or obeying commands.
Dr. Barrett has a machine that he believes will drain the house of energies, and throughout much of the novel he is either waiting for it to arrive or getting it ready for use. My only complaint with this novel is that I found myself frustrated every time the characters returned to their rooms to rest. They seemed to rest a lot, and for no apparent reason. They would occasionally meet and grab a bite to eat, argue about what's going on, then return to their rooms to rest some more. I suppose there was nothing else to do. They were there to experience the house, after all. But it got old.
Dr. Barrett spent so much time talking about starting the machine that I couldn't understand why they were taking so long. I kept thinking, "well, fire it up already! What are you waiting for?" While they delay, the evil of the house slowly takes its toll on each of them, attempting to claim their lives.
The novel is two parts horror and one part mystery. The mystery is: what is behind the evil in this house? In the end it became a struggle for answers as much as a struggle against the hauntings. Each character develops his or her own theory about what is behind Hell House, and ultimately, each character is proven incorrect. Nobody arrives at the absolute truth until the last few pages, and that does keep the reader turning.
The novel was very weakly adapted into a 1973 movie called THE LEGEND OF HELL HOUSE, starring Pamela Franklin (Florence), Roddy McDowall (Fischer), Clive Revill (Barrett) and Gayle Hunnicutt (Ann Barrett, renamed from Edith in the novel). Matheson himself wrote the screenplay but, due to the extraordinary limitations of the rating system at the time, they couldn't explore a fraction of the violence or graphic nature of the novel. Rating:  Date: 2008-06-08 Terrifying I am a big fan of "Horror". I read this book many years ago and it has remained at the top of my "must read list" ever since. I'm about to read it again. I am terrified just anticipating it. (Yippie) Rating:  Date: 2008-06-06 Interesting Failure from a Master Storyteller After reading the mind-blowingly brilliant, metaphorical masterpieces I AM LEGEND and THE INCREDIBLE SHRINKING MAN (two of the greatest novels of the second half of the 20th century), I was pretty disappointed with Matheson's haunted house story. One amazon reviewer called it "seventies pulp-porn," which is a perfect description. Though well-written, HELL HOUSE is not very scary: the scientist is hilariously unscientific, the characters are all a bit cartoonish, and the ending is incredibly rushed and silly. BUT the book is VERY entertaining, especially as an artifact of the era's "sexual revolution." The book revels in, and leers at, sex like a titillated teenager -- in fact, lurid sex is what sets this book apart. It's as if Matheson intentionally decided to rewrite Shirley Jackson's HAUNTING OF HILL HOUSE for a new hard-to-shock generation of swingers, tossing in "perverse" sex acts, rape, nudity, pop psychology, religious blasphemy, and the Marquis de Sade. Groovy. William Peter Blatty's book, THE EXORCIST, came out the same year (1971) but handled similar adult themes with far more sophistication, and much scarier results. Still, HELL HOUSE is fun and goofy and sleazy and shocking and harmless. I just don't understand how so many reviewers here actually found it scary, let alone "one of the best horror books ever." There are a LOT better ones out there. |