Publisher's
Weekly
Farris's
(
The
Fury
;
Wildwood
)
latest
novel
is
eerie,
fast-paced
and
original.
As
a
child
in
1906,
Arne
Horsfall
finds
a
sealed
crate,
addressed
to
a
professor
at
a
local
college,
that
has
fallen
off
a
train.
His
father
stores
the
object
in
the
barn
until
the
wayward
professor
can
pick
it
up.
But
the
crate
operates
like
a
Pandora's
box
on
Arne
and
his
mother;
overcome
with
curiosity,
they
pry
it
open
and
unleash
an
evil
spirit.
Physically,
the
spirit
looks
like
a
mummified
dark-skinned
man--not,
however,
like
a
black
man--and
his
mother
recognizes
it
from
the
stories
of
her
childhood
as
one
of
the
huldufolk
,
the
``unwashed
children
of
Cain,''
evil
and
immortal.
When
the
spirit
awakens
and
escapes,
the
Horsfall
farm
becomes
blighted;
Arne's
father
dies
of
gangrene
at
its
touch,
and
his
mother
becomes
its
slave.
At
this
point
the
novel
flashes
forward
to
1970:
Arne
is
a
deaf-mute
in
a
mental
institution,
where
he
has
lived
for
untold
years.
His
art
therapist,
Enid
Waller,
takes
pity
on
him
and
invites
him
to
her
home
for
dinner.
Out
of
the
hospital
for
the
first
time
in
decades,
Arne
senses
the
dark
spirit,
who
has
multiplied
and
stirs
now
in
response
to
Arne's
freedom.
The
lives
of
the
Waller
sisters
will
never
be
the
same.