Usher's Passing 
Originally published: New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1984.
This book is so, so, so good. The story is so suspenseful. The characters are great and the background of the Ushers is so awesome. It's a hard one to put down once you get into it.
Around two years ago I read McCammon's "They Thirst." It was my first experience with the author and it had mixed results. I enjoyed it but felt it was overlong (my edition was 60o+ pages and I felt it would have worked a lot better had he cut 200 of them) and I was annoyed that many plot elements came up or characters were introduced seemingly for him to forget about them until maybe a two page moment 300 pages later on to kill them off. Yet despite my complaints I felt there were so many

A gigantic maze-like mansion own by the mad heirs of a arms manufacturing empire? I suspect the author drew inspiration for this book from the Winchester house in San Jose. It was also very much of the style of another great southern writer, the late Michael McDowell, a master of southern gothic horror. The only thing that keeps me from giving this 5 stars is that too many of the characters were totally unlikable.My thanks to the folks at the Horror Aficionados group for giving me the
Usher's Passing is one of Robert McCammon's finest early novels. I was captivated by the story and characters, as well as the homage paid to Edgar Allan Poe in a few different ways. I also loved how McCammon chronicled the history of the Usher family. This is a fantastic and scary tale, perfect for the Halloween season.
Spiritual darkness. Moral darkness. Blasphemy and decay. His eyes closed. Poes tale may have been fiction, Rix, but it cut very close to the bone. The Ushers have everything. Everything. But they are dead in their souls.This was supposed to be part of my Halloween Reads 2017 but missed the October dateline by a whole week, due to the shortage of time and the books length (416 pages, not exactly a doorstopper but this kind of length takes me one or two weeks depending on free time available).
This is a book about a very dysfunctional family and the curses that they lived with. The main focus of the story deals with Rix Usher. Rix is a horror writer, who wants to make it on his own. Rix is a outcast of his family and wants nothing to do with the family fortune. Rix, is called back to Usherland, because his father is dying. You add some creepy monsters and a scary abandon house, which holds many dark secrets and much more. McCammon, pulls everything together, weaving the past and the
Robert R. McCammon
Paperback | Pages: 416 pages Rating: 3.92 | 4009 Users | 248 Reviews

Identify Regarding Books Usher's Passing
Title | : | Usher's Passing |
Author | : | Robert R. McCammon |
Book Format | : | Paperback |
Book Edition | : | Deluxe Edition |
Pages | : | Pages: 416 pages |
Published | : | October 1st 1992 by Pocket Books (first published 1984) |
Categories | : | Horror. Fiction. Mystery. Gothic. Suspense. Fantasy. Paranormal |
Representaion As Books Usher's Passing
In this most gothic of Robert McCammon's novels, setting is key: the continuing saga of the Usher family (descended from the brother of Roderick and Madeline of Edgar Poe's "Fall of the House of Usher") takes place in the weird and picturesque heart of the North Carolina mountains. The haughty, aristocratic Ushers live in a mansion near Asheville; the poor but crafty mountain folk (whose families are just as ancient) live on Briartop Mountain nearby. At harvest time, when the book's action unfolds, the mountains are a blaze of color. Add to the mixture a sinister history of mountain kids disappearing every year, a journalist investigating those disappearances, a monster called "The Pumpkin Man," moldy books and paintings in a huge old library at the Usher estate, and a secret chamber with a strange device involving a brass pendulum and tuning forks--and you've got a splendid recipe for atmospheric horror.Originally published: New York: Holt, Rinehart, and Winston, 1984.
Mention Books Toward Usher's Passing
Original Title: | Usher's Passing |
ISBN: | 0671769928 (ISBN13: 9780671769925) |
Edition Language: | English |
Literary Awards: | Alabama Author Award for Fiction (1985) |
Rating Regarding Books Usher's Passing
Ratings: 3.92 From 4009 Users | 248 ReviewsAssess Regarding Books Usher's Passing
There are so many things that I could comment on with Robert McCammon's books. I think what stands out the most, is the fact that his endings never disappoint--they live up to the expectations set during the course of the entire storyline. Absolutely riveting book that will remain a constant on my "favorites" shelves.*Latest reading ended October 1st, 2016 (although technically our October group read, I spent most of the past week in doctor's offices/hospitals with the kiddos, so much readingThis book is so, so, so good. The story is so suspenseful. The characters are great and the background of the Ushers is so awesome. It's a hard one to put down once you get into it.
Around two years ago I read McCammon's "They Thirst." It was my first experience with the author and it had mixed results. I enjoyed it but felt it was overlong (my edition was 60o+ pages and I felt it would have worked a lot better had he cut 200 of them) and I was annoyed that many plot elements came up or characters were introduced seemingly for him to forget about them until maybe a two page moment 300 pages later on to kill them off. Yet despite my complaints I felt there were so many

A gigantic maze-like mansion own by the mad heirs of a arms manufacturing empire? I suspect the author drew inspiration for this book from the Winchester house in San Jose. It was also very much of the style of another great southern writer, the late Michael McDowell, a master of southern gothic horror. The only thing that keeps me from giving this 5 stars is that too many of the characters were totally unlikable.My thanks to the folks at the Horror Aficionados group for giving me the
Usher's Passing is one of Robert McCammon's finest early novels. I was captivated by the story and characters, as well as the homage paid to Edgar Allan Poe in a few different ways. I also loved how McCammon chronicled the history of the Usher family. This is a fantastic and scary tale, perfect for the Halloween season.
Spiritual darkness. Moral darkness. Blasphemy and decay. His eyes closed. Poes tale may have been fiction, Rix, but it cut very close to the bone. The Ushers have everything. Everything. But they are dead in their souls.This was supposed to be part of my Halloween Reads 2017 but missed the October dateline by a whole week, due to the shortage of time and the books length (416 pages, not exactly a doorstopper but this kind of length takes me one or two weeks depending on free time available).
This is a book about a very dysfunctional family and the curses that they lived with. The main focus of the story deals with Rix Usher. Rix is a horror writer, who wants to make it on his own. Rix is a outcast of his family and wants nothing to do with the family fortune. Rix, is called back to Usherland, because his father is dying. You add some creepy monsters and a scary abandon house, which holds many dark secrets and much more. McCammon, pulls everything together, weaving the past and the
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