Supernatural: Nevermore
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Average customer review:Product Description
Twenty-two years ago, Sam and Dean Winchester lost their mother to a mysterious and demonic supernatural force. In the years after, their father, John, taught them about the paranormal evil that lives in the dark corners and on the back roads of America...and he taught them how to kill it.
Sam and Dean have hit New York City to check out a local rocker's haunted house. But before they can figure out why a lovesick banshee in an '80s heavy-metal T-shirt is wailing in the bedroom, a far more macabre crime catches their attention. Not far from the house, two university students were beaten to death by a strange assailant. A murder that's bizarre even by New York City standards, it's the latest in a line of killings that the brothers soon suspect are based on the creepy stories of legendary writer Edgar Allan Poe.
Their investigation leads them to the center of one of Poe's horror classics, face-to-face with their most terrifying foe yet. And if Sam and Dean don't rewrite the ending of this chilling tale, a grisly serial killer will end their lives forevermore.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #32064 in Books
- Published on: 2007-08-01
- Released on: 2007-07-31
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Mass Market Paperback
- 336 pages
Customer Reviews
Does the writer even watch supernatural?
This book was a fluke, and did no justice to this awesome show.
First of all, all of the characters talk in the same exact way.
My gosh- i think 2 times sam says "hardy har har" WTF!
every character says "anyhow" over, and over, and over over over.
the book takes over 100 pages to get almost no where.
barely any actions, a terrible scenerio- bad story, terrible writing,
if you love supernatural as much as i do, get
"the supernatural book of monsters..." "supernatural: bone collecter" or wait till february 09 and get john winchester's journal
great read for teenage son
bought for son, he absolutely loved it...he is big fan of the supernatural tv series
Read Witch's Canyon instead
Wow, where to start? While DeCandido isn't a bad writer exactly, he isn't great and this novel is not good. The characterizations are broad and shallow without any of the subtleties or relationship elements that make the brotherhood work on the screen. They come across as ignorant (Dean can't use his own cell phone, has never heard of Edgar Allen Poe and doesn't know what a forward is in soccer; Sam has never watched a movie in his life, or a TV apparently), petty, mean, bickering, stupid, unprofessional and incompetent. Every character is written on a 7th grade level and humor is inserted in places where it shouldn't be, which sucks any pathos or tragedy out of all of it, especially from the rather stupid ghost. The ghost doesn't meld with the rest of the plot and the incidentals between the supernatural don't meld with the supernatural story. The author uses italics constantly to emphasize pronunciation and the effect is as if a bunch of high school valley girls have possessed every one in the book, our heroes included. It's pitched too young for most of us and yet there's too much talk of sex and too much gore for kids. The boys blaspheme constantly (which they don't do in the show.) He's created nicknames for the characters that they've never said (and never would) and he has them use phrases they'd never say (imagine either Winchester saying "Exqueeze me". Please.) He over-explains things all fans know, within dialogue, which is a lazy and bumpy way to introduce exposition yet he leaves out any detail on things many might not know (Aleister Crowley, for instance.) He doesn't seem to understand what makes the show work on a dialogue level so instead of studying the show, he has simplified it all into a massive overuse of "hot", "dude" and "freakin'". They sound like idiot children and act like it too.
The facts on Poe are introduced accurately but boringly, the plot meanders, is unengaging. The boys' relationship is antagonistic and childish and nothing more. Dean is a complete idiot who spends half the book flirting with one of the unrealistic (all the rest are stupid instead of fantasy) women, and she isn't even a crucial plot element. It's wasted time and effort.
He also places his story between episodes Crossroads Blues and Croatoan, which he tells us, which is nice, but then he includes a spoiler that happens after Croatoan. It's annoying.
Go read Witch's Canyon by Jeff Mariotte instead. It's what you really want.
Mariotte knows the nuances that make the show work. He can handle English flawlessly while creating a story and script you can see the actors do. His side characters are real people, the plot is interesting and well-crafted. Any new things he makes up for the book fit in with the show mythology without clashing (unlike the other guy. Since when does Dean have hearing problems?). Witch's Canyon reads like a long episode. For what's basically sanctioned fan fiction: Nevermore: C. Witch's Canyon: A+.
Supernatural: Witch's Canyon (Supernatural)





