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Off Season - Unexpurgated Hard Cover Edition Hardcover – March 1, 2005
Jack Ketchum (Author) Find all the books, read about the author, and more. See search results for this author |
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- Print length232 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherOverlook Connection Press
- Publication dateMarch 1, 2005
- Dimensions5.98 x 0.69 x 9.02 inches
- ISBN-101892950553
- ISBN-13978-1892950550
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Product details
- Publisher : Overlook Connection Press; Limited edition (March 1, 2005)
- Language : English
- Hardcover : 232 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1892950553
- ISBN-13 : 978-1892950550
- Item Weight : 1.1 pounds
- Dimensions : 5.98 x 0.69 x 9.02 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #1,107,188 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #12,958 in Psychological Fiction (Books)
- #15,058 in Psychological Thrillers (Books)
- #41,583 in Horror Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Jack Ketchum "is on a par with Clive Barker (Hellraiser), James Ellroy (L.A. Confidential) and Thomas Harris (The Silence of The Lambs)," and that "the only novelist working today that is writing more important fiction is Cormack McCarthy (No Country for Old Men, The Road). - Stephen King
Jack Ketchum is the pseudonym for novelist Dallas Mayr. He was born in Livingston, New Jersey in 1946. A onetime actor, teacher, and lumber salesman, Ketchum credits his childhood love of Elvis Presley, dinosaurs, and horror for getting him through his formative years. As a teenager, was befriended by Robert Bloch, author of "Psycho" who became a mentor to him. He supported Ketchum's work just as his work was supported by his own mentor, H.P. Lovecraft. This relationship with Bloch lasted until his death in 1994.
A pivotal point in Jack Ketchum's career came while he was working for the Scott Meredith Literary Agency. He met Henry Miller and assisted him as his agent until shortly before his death in 1980. His extraordinary encounter with Miller at his home in Pacific Palisades is one of the subjects of his memoir in "Book of Souls".
In 1980, Jack Ketchum published his first novel "Off Season". Stephen King said in his acceptance speech at the 2003 National Book Awards that "Off Season set off a furor in my supposed field, that of horror, that was unequaled until the advent of Clive Barker. It is not too much to say that these two gentlemen remade the face of American popular fiction." Ketchum has received continued praise by King throughout their friendship.
Ketchum's work is largely based upon true events. The Girl Next Door , for example, was inspired by the 1965 murder of the young Sylvia Likens. In the special edition of the novel, King, who volunteered to write the preface, wrote one of the longest introductions of his career. He later went on to say that the movie adaptation of the book was "the first authentically shocking American film I've seen since Henry: Portrait of a Serial Killer over 20 years ago. If you are easily disturbed, you should not watch this movie. If, on the other hand, you are prepared for a long look into hell, suburban style, The Girl Next Door will not disappoint. This is the dark-side-of-the-moon version of Stand By Me."
He has received numerous Bram Stoker Awards for works such as "The Box", "Closing Time", and "Peaceable Kingdom". As his books gained in worldwide popularity, they also began to be adapted into feature films, the first of which was "Jack Ketchum's The Lost" which went on to be a cult success, followed by the highly controversial second film "The Girl Next Door". However, the main launch for Jack Ketchum into international commercial and critical success was the long-awaited release by Magnolia Pictures of the film Red, based on his novel, starring Brian Cox (The Bourne Supremacy) and Tom Sizemore (Saving Private Ryan). After favorable reviews at The Sundance Film Festival, the movie made a critical showing in the United States and enjoyed relative success internationally with subsequent translations of the novel.
The author enjoyed more international succes with the publication and film version of "The Woman" co-written and directed by Lucky McKee in which the New York Times said "in this lean adaptation of a novel by Jack Ketchum and himself, maintains an artfully calibrated pace, investing a powerful parable with an abundance of closely observed details. Like David Cronenberg and Roman Polanski, Mr. McKee is a master at drawing suspense from pregnant silences."
Jack Ketchum continues his rise with the present showing of "The Woman" at the Sundance Film Festival 2011 co-written by Ketchum with director Lucky McKee. The novel is to be released this year.
Kethcum lives in New York City where he continues to write, articles, reviews, short stories, novels and screenplays. For more information go to international website: www.thejackketchum.com.
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The first chapter pulls you in but then at the end it describes every single item in the woman’s wallet and then you have to endure 129 pages about the unlikable victims. The audiobook came with this edition but I found that to be super distracting/ comical whenever the male narrator read the female parts. But that happens with every audiobook that isn’t full cast. There are probably 5 sex scenes—3 of which are with the cannibals in all their animal glory. I skipped through those, and when females were dying their nipples were brought into the paragraph. And the females were just :| . One of them did nothing but cry and couldn’t even run. In the middle of an all out cannibal attack her character is being useless and sitting on the floor and stops the story to pull us away and describe things like rivers etc.
I was not rooting for her.
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I was advised to read them in the order stated. The first three at least. If you are going to read them do as I did.
You will not be disappointed.

I'd never read any Jack Ketchum before this, but I'd heard good things, and so, intrigued by 'The Sawney Bean Clan' style premise, and it's heavily censored publishing history, I thought I'd give this one a go first.
Pretty good. I quite enjoyed it overall. The first 60 pages are duller than a train~spotters memoirs, but after that, once it kicked off, just under halfway into the book, the action was fairly relentless..
Now don't get wrong, it's by no means the goriest/nastiest book I've ever read, and whether it deserved to be so heavily cut (or indeed it's reputation as being so gruesome) on it's release back in 1980, probably depends on how easily shocked you are, and your views around censorship in general, but overall you can kinda see why it might have upset a few mainstream readers at the time..
Featuring as it does, some nice juicy chapters that include: dismemberment, brain eating, child decapitation, point blank lobotomies, castration, mutilation, stone age torture, organ removal, cannibal cooking tips and sexual assault, etc!
Fear not though, because it's not so long before the civilised heroes begin to fight back and turn the tables (which was rather upsetting as I was growing quite fond of the cannibal family) and it eventually all comes to a head in a somewhat predictable (not that that spoils it) climactic bloodbath.
So there we have it folks, 'Off Season' is a straight up, genuine, early 80s, backwoods inbred slasher~horror. That has a good old humourless (There is a lot of humour, but it's macabre humour as opposed to irritating fanboy stuff), bloodthirsty vibe. And is an enjoyable fast paced (once it gets going) read, which I sat down and finished in one sitting.
Followed by Offspring and The Woman ~ which were both made into films. Which, if talking of films, if you like stuff like Wrong Turn or The Hills Have Eyes, this novel certainly comes recommended.
The Leisure Books version is the uncut, cheap mass market version I read.
4.25/5

Rather than reiterate the stories, as so many have already done, I thought I would explain the Dead River Chronicles, chronologically.
The story begins with Off Season (1981) and continues in Offspring (1991), making The Woman (2012) the third in this series of books. Like all the stories, Off Season is set along the coastline from Maine to Canada, specifically in the fictitious town of Dead River, Maine. In the caves that pepper the mountainside overlooking the ocean are a tribe of cannibals. These feral cave-dwellers are bent on terrorizing the townsfolk and visitors to the area. Other stories that are linked with this trilogy are the novel Hide and Seek (1984) and the short stories Winter Child (2006) and Cow (2012); Winter Child fills the gap between Off Season and Offspring; Cow is a vignette that tracks events following The Woman.
I hope this explains the Dead River series to the uninitiated or those who may have read one of the books and crave more.


This book is more graphic than The Girl Next Door; especially at the end but is all the better for it in my opinion. I like the fact this is the complete book not the cut back version and reading Jack Ketchum's thoughts at the end were very interesting.
If this is your first Jack Ketchum book you chose well - brace yourself though it's one hell of a coaster ride!