The house talks. It breathes. And it’s hungry.
The Kings have been in the creepy old place, their new home, for only a few days, but they’ve experienced enough terror to last a lifetime. And the mystery is growing even more baffling. Shadowy and shifting, the big house conceals doors into other worlds that blur the line between memories and dreams and the slightest misstep can change history forever.
At least, that’s if they believe the trembling old man who shows up claiming to know them. “There’s a reason you’re in the house,” he tells them. “As gatekeepers, we must make sure only those events that are supposed to happen get through to the future.”
The problem is that horrors beyond description wait on the other side of those gates. As if that weren’t enough, the Kings are also menaced by sinister forces on this side like the dark, ancient stranger Taksidian, who wants them out now.
Xander, David, and Toria must venture beyond the gates to save their missing mother and discover how truly high the stakes have become.
Publisher: Thomas Nelson Publishing (February 21, 2012)
Page Count: 320 pagesMy friend and I decided to read this book together and it’s certainly one of my favorites of the series so far!
The Plot
The plot picks up exactly where the last one left off and brings even more questions into the mix about this mysterious house and the Kings’ role in it. The end was definitely the most intense part. So much happened in so little time with some great twists so I definitely have to read the next one to see what happens!
The Characters
The Setting
Most of the book takes place in the mysterious house though there are brief scenes in the Civil War era, ancient Assyria, and a strange calm world. The plot definitely thickens with the house because it turns out it has a mind of its own and it wants to take people back into the stream of time it believes belong there. So in a way the setting is an enemy.
Epic Things
I appreciate the reference to the Last of the Mohicans.
The Theme
“You have a keen sense of the preciousness of life and the finality of death–here on earth, anyway. To you, death does not simply end life. It steals away the sunset you’ll never see, the children you’ll never hold, the wife you’ll never love. It’s frightening to almost lose your future, and it’s heart breaking to witness death snuff out other people’s tomorrows.”~Jesse King
Content Cautions
What We Can Take Away For Our Writing
Conclusion
I’m definitely going to keep going with this series. I’ve gotta find out what happens after that cliffhanger. XD
I’ve been writing since before I could drive. Short stories, investigative exposes celebrity profiles, editorials, business columns, radio dramas, screenplays–you name it. For the last few years, I’ve focused on novels. I’m the author of the thrillers “Comes a Horseman,” “Germ,” “Deadfall,” “Deadlock,” “The 13th Tribe,” and the young adult series Dreamhouse Kings–“House of Dark Shadows,” “Watcher in the Woods,” “Gatekeepers,” “Timescape,” “Whirlwind,” and “Frenzy.”
Several of my books have been sold or optioned by Hollywood producers. All of them are in various stages of production. I’m also working on an original screenplay with Andrew Davis (director of “The Fugitive” and “The Guardian). I wrote the screenplay for Ted Dekker’s “Blessed Child.” My short story “Kill Zone” appears in the James Patterson-edited anthology “Thriller,” and my essay on Thomas Perry’s “The Butcher’s Boy” can be found in the anthology “Thriller: 100 Must Reads.”
The 13th Tribe
The Judgment Stone
Review: The House of Dark Shadows by Robert Liparulo