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Hell House

Hell House
By Richard Matheson

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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.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #48684 in Books
  • Published on: 1999-10-13
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Paperback
  • 288 pages

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Editorial Reviews

From the Publisher
"Hell House is the scariest haunted house novel ever written. It looms over the rest the way the mountains loom over the foothills." --Stephen King

About the Author
Richard Matheson is The New York Times bestselling author of I Am Legend, Hell House, Somewhere in Time, The Incredible Shrinking Man, A Stir of Echoes, The Beardless Warriors, The Path, Seven Steps to Midnight, Now You See It . . . , and What Dreams May Come. A Grand Master of Horror and past winner of the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement, he has also won the Edgar, the Hugo, the Spur, and the Writer's Guild awards.

He lives in Calabasas, California.

Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.

DECEMBER 18, 1970
 
 
3:17 P.M.
 
It had been raining hard since five o’clock that morning. Brontean weather, Dr. Barrett thought. He repressed a smile. He felt rather like a character in some latter-day Gothic romance. The driving rain, the cold, the two-hour ride from Manhattan in one of Deutsch’s long black leather-upholstered limousines. The interminable wait in this corridor while disconcerted-looking men and women hurried in and out of Deutsch’s bedroom, glancing at him occasionally.
He drew his watch from its vest pocket and raised the lid. He’d been here more than an hour now. What did Deutsch want of him? Something to do with parapsychology, most likely. The old man’s chain of newspapers and magazines were forever printing articles on the subject. “Return from the Grave” “The Girl Who Wouldn’t Die”—always sensational, rarely factual.
Wincing at the effort, Dr. Barrett lifted his right leg over his left. He was a tall, slightly overweight man in his middle fifties, his thinning blond hair unchanged in color, though his trimmed beard showed traces of white. He sat erect on the straight-back chair, staring at the door to Deutsch’s bedroom. Edith must be getting restless downstairs. He was sorry she’d come. Still, he’d had no way of knowing it would take this long.
* * *
The door to Deutsch’s bedroom opened, and his male secretary, Hanley, came out. “Doctor,” he said.
Barrett reached for his cane and, standing, limped across the hallway, stopping in front of the shorter man. He waited while the secretary leaned in through the doorway and announced, “Doctor Barrett, sir.” Then he stepped past Hanley, entering the room. The secretary closed the door behind him.
The darkly paneled bedroom was immense. Sanctum of the monarch, Barrett thought as he moved across the rug. Stopping by the massive bed, he looked at the old man sitting in it. Rolf Rudolph Deutsch was eighty-seven, bald, and skeletal, his dark eyes peering out from bony cavities. Barrett smiled. “Good afternoon.” Intriguing that this wasted creature ruled an empire, he was thinking.
“You’re crippled.” Deutsch’s voice was rasping. “No one told me that.”
“I beg your pardon?” Barrett had stiffened.
“Never mind.” Deutsch cut him off. “It’s not that vital, I suppose. My people have recommended you. They say you’re one of the five best in your field.” He drew in laboring breath. “Your fee will be one hundred thousand dollars.”
Barrett started.
“Your assignment is to establish the facts.”
“Regarding what?” asked Barrett.
Deutsch seemed hesitant about replying, as though he felt it was beneath him. Finally he said, “Survival.”
“You want me—?”
“—to tell me if it’s factual or not.”
Barrett’s heart sank. That amount of money would make all the difference in the world to him. Still, how could he in conscience accept it on such grounds?
“It isn’t lies I want,” Deutsch told him. “I’ll buy the answer, either way. So long as it’s definitive.”
Barrett felt a roil of despair. “How can I convince you, either way?” He was compelled to say it.
“By giving me facts,” Deutsch answered irritably.
“Where am I to find them? I’m a physicist. In the twenty years I’ve studied parapsychology, I’ve yet to—”
“If they exist,” Deutsch interrupted, “you’ll find them in the only place on earth I know of where survival has yet to be refuted. The Belasco house in Maine.”
Hell House?”
Something glittered in the old man’s eyes.
“Hell House,” he said.
* * *
Barrett felt a tingling of excitement. “I thought Belasco’s heirs had it sealed off after what happened—”
“That was thirty years ago.” Deutsch cut him off again. “They need the money now; I’ve bought the place. Can you be there by Monday?”
Barrett hesitated, then, seeing Deutsch begin to frown, nodded once. “Yes.” He couldn’t let this chance go by.
“There’ll be two others with you,” Deutsch said.
“May I ask who—?”
“Florence Tanner and Benjamin Franklin Fischer.”
Barrett tried not to show the disappointment he felt. An over-emotive Spiritualist medium, and the lone survivor of the 1940 debacle? He wondered if he dared object. He had his own group of sensitives and didn’t see how Florence Tanner or Fischer could be of any help to him. Fischer had shown incredible abilities as a boy, but after his breakdown had obviously lost his gift, been caught in fraud a number of times, finally disappearing from the field entirely. He listened, half-attentive, as Deutsch told him that Florence Tanner would fly north with him, while Fischer would meet them in Maine.
The old man noted his expression. “Don’t worry, you’ll be in charge,” he said; “Tanner’s only going because my people tell me she’s a first-class medium—”
“But a mental medium,” said Barrett.
“—and I want that line of approach employed, as well as yours,” Deutsch went on, as though Barrett hadn’t spoken. “Fischer’s presence is obvious.”
Barrett nodded. There was no way out of it, he saw. He’d have to bring up one of his own people after the project was under way. “As to costs—” he started.
The old man waved him off. “Take that up with Hanley. You have unlimited funds.”
“And time?”
“That you don’t have,” Deutsch replied. “I want the answer in a week.”
Barrett looked appalled.
“Take it or leave it!” the old man snapped, sudden, naked rage in his expression. Barrett knew he had to accede or lose the opportunity—and there was a chance if he could get his machine constructed in time.
He nodded once. “A week,” he said.
 
3:50 P.M.
 
Anything else?” asked Hanley.
Barrett reviewed the items in his mind again. A list of all phenomena observed in the Belasco house. Restoration of its electrical system. Installation of telephone service. The swimming pool and steam room made available to him. Barrett had ignored the small man’s frown at the fourth item. A daily swim and steam bath were mandatory for him.
“One more item,” he said. He tried to sound casual but felt that his excitement showed. “I need a machine. I have the blueprints for it at my apartment.”
“How soon will you need it?” Hanley asked.
“As soon as possible.”
“Is it large?”
Twelve years, Barrett thought. “Quite large,” he said.
“That’s it?”
“All I can think of at the moment. I haven’t mentioned living facilities, of course.”
“Enough rooms have been renovated for your use. A couple from Caribou Falls will prepare and deliver your meals.” Hanley seemed about to smile. “They’ve refused to sleep in the house.”
Barrett stood. “It’s just as well. They’d only be in the way.”
Hanley walked him toward the library door. Before they reached it, it was opened sharply by a stout man, who glared at Barrett. Although he was forty years younger and a hundred pounds heavier, William Reinhardt Deutsch bore an unmistakable resemblance to his father.
He shut the door. “I’m warning you right now,” he said, “I’m going to block this thing.”
Barrett stared at him.
“The truth,” Deutsch said. “This is a waste of time, isn’t it? Put it in writing, and I’ll make you out a check for a thousand dollars right now.”
Barrett tightened. “I’m afraid—”
“There’s no such thing as the supernatural, is there?” Deutsch’s neck was reddening.
“Correct,” said Barrett. Deutsch began to smile in triumph. “The word is ‘supernormal.’ Nature cannot be transcen—”
“What the hell’s the difference?” interrupted Deutsch. “It’s superstition, all of it!”
“I’m sorry, but it isn’t.” Barrett started past him. “Now, if you’ll excuse me.”
Deutsch caught his arm. “Now, look, you better drop this thing. I’ll see you never get that money—”
Barrett pulled his arm free. “Do what you will,” he said. “I’ll proceed until I hear otherwise from your father.”
He closed the door and started down the corridor. In light of present knowledge, his mind addressed Deutsch, anyone who chooses to refer to psychic phenomena as superstition simply isn’t aware of what’s going on in the world. The documentation is immense—
Barrett stopped and leaned against the wall. His leg was starting to ache again. For the first time, he allowed himself to recognize what a strain on his condition it might be to spend a week in the Belasco house.
What if it was really as bad as the two accounts claimed it was?
 
4:37 P.M.
 
The Rolls-Royce sped along the highway toward Manhattan.
“That’s an awful lot of money.” Edith still sounded incredulous.
“Not to him,” said Barrett. “Especially when you consider that what he’s paying for is an assurance of immortality.”
“But he must know that you don’t believe—”
“I’m sure he does,” Barrett interrupted. He didn’t want to consider the poss...


Customer Reviews

Scarier than I thought it would be...5
I am now officially a fan of Richard Matheson.

I started out by reading "I am Legend", which is one of the best horror stories ever written, so I was expecting a little less from this. And, it isn't as good as "I am Legend", but then again, not much is. I am on a crusade now to get all of my horror-loving friends and family to read Matheson - it seems his work has been virtually buried by the enormous amount of really bad horror that seemed to spring up in Stephen King's wake (which isn't King's fault...publishers just started seeing dollar signs...). Matheson is a rarity in the field of horror - he's classic.

"Hell House" is a fast read. Each chapter consists of one day, and the chapters are broken down into little sections (7:08pm, 1:39 am, etc.) that keep the pace quick, and make it very easy for you to say, "Oh, I guess I can squeeze in just a little more before turning out the light." (Or at least going to sleep!) The writing is snappy, and to the point. Matheson creates vivid, cinematic images without having the writing call too much attention to itself. Surely this is a skill he perfected while writing for "The Twilight Zone".

"Hell House" has enough twists and turns to satisfy, and enough really scary, disgusting stuff to possibly haunt your dreams. I found myself having to think happy thoughts as I closed my eyes at night. I haven't had to do that in a while...not since reading "It" by Stephen King as a kid.

Fellow horror fans, you really ought to do yourselves a favor and read this book (and all of his others, too!). And remember, if anything seems familiar -- like it's been done before -- then it was probably lifted from this!

Highly recommended!

The Mount Everest of haunted house novels5
"Hell House" author Richard Matheson has always been one of the great supernatural authors of recent history. His novels may not hit the bestseller lists with the frequency of Stephen King or Dean Koontz, but his contributions to the genre are legendary. His resume includes episodes of "The Twilight Zone," "I Am Legend," "Somewhere In Time," "The Shrinking Man" and "Stir of Echoes." For me, "Hell House" stands out as his great contribution to the genre, a storied and historical form of literature traveled by the likes of Shirley Jackson, Bram Stoker, H. G. Wells and Sir Arthur Conan Doyle. Just when you think all has been covered in the haunted house genre, here comes Matheson with this electric and extraordinarily creepy variation circa 1971.

Wonderfully realized and darkly imaginative, "Hell House" is a simple tale of four unluckly folks hired to crack the legend of Hell House, an isolated mansion in Maine with a history as dark as the Manson Family at Spahn Ranch. Once owned by a Mr. Belasco, the house was an early 20th century hangout of deviant folks who explored carnal avenues to the ultimate point of starvation and death. Two previous expeditions of scientists ended in suicide and disaster, and our modern-day protagonists, needless-to-say, have their work cut out for them.

By novel's end, each character must come to terms with their own human weaknesses and repressions, exposed by the overwhelming evil of Hell House. Matheson's novel is brilliant because it brings a sexual awareness to the genre only flirted with in the past. The house, in many ways, is a prison with windows bricked over, nestled uncomfortably in an isolated, fog-covered valley. Matheson's characters are painfully alone, battling forces psycologically and eventually physically.

What is most memorable about "Hell House," is the set-up and creation of one of the most evil houses in literature history. Matheson's dark imagaination has created a character that is both repulsive and erotic, possessing an energy that slowly works on human frailty, devouring and dominating. Past haunted house novels have enthralled with gothic and mysterious allure. Matheson's novel throws goth out the window, replacing such conventions with an oozing, carnal evil, grotesque in nature, overwhelming and horrifying.

"Hell House" is so good, one wonders how it could possibly be topped. I don't think it ever really will, but recent authors such as King and Anne Rice continue to create epic variations on the haunted house story. But the brilliance of Matheson's novel is its primal simplicity. Horror has rarely seen a tale as creepy as "Hell House."

Best Horror Novel I've read so far5
I've been indulging in horror novels for the past year and I've read everything from Anne Rice to Stephen King. This novel was the most frightening novel I've laid my eyes on. While reading it, someone knocked on my door and I screamed so loud that I practically gave my visitor a heart attack.

So would you like this book? Picture this. There is a house where only one person has survived living beneath its roof in over 30 years. Four people return (a physicist, his wife, and 2 mediums); with a reward of 100,000 to see if they can get rid of the "hauntings" at Hell House. The physicists, Lionel, insists that there are no such things as ghost; that paranormal occurrences are a natural part of the world created by electromagnetic forces rather than the dead. The spiritualist, Florence, argues that the phenomenon's are a result of trapped and torments spirits which she has the power to relinquish from their prison. The mystery emerges as the debate of the force behind the phantoms grows. Will any of these four survive to solve the mystery of Hell House and if they do did they really learn the truth or just what the house wanted them to learn?