• The Locktender's House

  • By: Steven Sherrill
  • Narrated by: Kim McKean
  • Length: 11 hrs and 20 mins
  • 4.1 out of 5 stars (9 ratings)

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The Locktender's House  By  cover art

The Locktender's House

By: Steven Sherrill
Narrated by: Kim McKean
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Editorial reviews

Kim McKean’s youthful and plaintive voice performance pairs perfectly with Stephen Sherrill’s The Locktender’s House, a psychologically perceptive story about grief and the supernatural.

In the novel, Janice Witherspoon’s life is shattered when her soldier boyfriend is killed in Iraq. Leaving the home they shared, she winds up in an abandoned house in rural Pennsylvania where she forms a relationship with a sensitive sculptor and a woman whose mysterious story shares a connection with Janice’s past.

McKean sounds like an impartial but engaged witness to these odd events in her performance of Sherrill’s lyrical, unsettling novel.

Publisher's summary

Come to the body.

Janice Witherspoon’s stagnant life is abruptly upended by the senseless death of her boyfriend thousands of miles away. Fueled by shock, steered by fate, uncertainty, and fear, she gathers her belongings from the North Carolina apartment they shared and takes to the road, intending to meet the soldier’s body on its journey back from the Iraqi desert. But something - an inner voice, or the beguiling utterances of an older, darker soul? - drives Janice farther and farther off course. When after a mechanical and emotional breakdown she finally comes to a stop, Janice finds herself deep in rural Pennsylvania, on the grounds of an abandoned lockhouse.

Despite the building’s ramshackle quality and its lack of electricity, plumbing, or any apparent links to the outside world, Janice is seduced by the calm of the old house, the canal, now dry, it once governed, and the mountains rising up all around. Days turn to weeks, weeks turn to months, and then she finally lets down her guard, opening her doors to the inhabitants of her new province: Stephen Gainy, a reclusive art teacher and stone carver, and a spectral, alluring woman with a beautiful voice. But as Janice grows closer to both Stephen and the elusive minstrel, her calm gives way to a flood of terrifying blackouts, inexplicable accidents, and nightmares.

As the indefensible edges between the real and the unreal blur and break down, Janice is pulled into the tattered web of her own incriminating genealogy, and finds herself roped by blood to a series of unspeakable tragedies that occurred generations ago, when the canals were full and thriving.

Whether or not the truths Janice discovers will drown or resuscitate her depends on the choices she makes.

Steven Sherrill follows up his acclaimed novels The Minotaur Takes a Cigarette Break and Visits from the Drowned Girl with an evocative, mesmerizing tale that delicately navigates the line between suspense and horror. Based loosely on actual events that took place along the canal systems of the Northeast around the turn of the 20th century, The Locktender’s House is an eerie, gripping narrative that reveals how the dark sins of the past are often inescapable.

©2007 Steven Sherill (P)2013 Audible, Inc.

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Narration is very lackluster

The story is great with elegent turns of phrase and an interesting plot but it is totally wrecked by poor narration. Drab and monotone, it sounds more like someone is mechanically reciting laundry list.

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