Sarah and Brian were the perfect couple ... until Brian fell in love with someone else. Sarah's life was shattered. Sarah was shattered. Miraculously, Sarah soon had a new lover--one who came to her in dreams, who promised her anything she wanted, in return for a small favor, an innocent sacrifice... Anything she wanted--even Brian. For her own, forever. In exchange, all Jade wanted was Sarah's soul....
Ужасы18+Also Available by Lisa Tuttle
LISA TUTTLE
FAMILIAR SPIRIT
WILL ERRICKSON
VALANCOURT BOOKS
Originally published by Berkley Books in 1983
Copyright © 1983 by Lisa Tuttle
Cover painting copyright © 1989 by Lee MacLeod
Introduction copyright © 2020 by Will Errickson
“Paperbacks from Hell” logo designed by Timothy O’Donnell. © 2017 Quirk Books. Used under license. All rights reserved.
Published by Valancourt Books, Richmond, Virginia
http://www.valancourtbooks.com
All rights reserved. The use of any part of this publication reproduced, transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, or stored in a retrieval system, without prior written consent of the publisher, constitutes an infringement of the copyright law.
Cover text design by M. S. Corley
INTRODUCTION
I don’t know about you, but that third sentence really strikes an uneasy chord in my heart of horror. Every character who has ever bought—or even just rented, as the case may be—a house in a horror novel has probably had a similar thought and pang. But as everyone from
But you, fellow horror fiction fan, with this book in hand,
It is our protagonist Sarah who has those innocent-sounding thoughts. She’s just been dumped by her boyfriend for another woman, after putting off his suggestions of marriage and domestication. Heartbroken, Sarah’s been living with fellow grad student friends, a married couple, in a cozy bohemian-lite setup. Now she is ready to move out on her own, into an unkempt, weathered green frame house on a corner lot in a quiet part of an Austin neighborhood (based on a real house Tuttle lived in with the late poet and short story writer Steve Utley; it was demolished not long after).
Details of the cultured Austin class that these grad students belong to pepper
Tuttle says that in 1979 she “made a few false starts on a novel I called