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Second Child

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Secret Cove. Ruggedly beautiful and remote, bordered by dark woods and deserted beaches, this postcard-perfect village harbors the mansions of the wealthy—families who have summered in splendid seclusion at Secret Cove for generations. Here, one hundred years ago, on the night of the annual August Moon Ball, a shy and lovely servant girl committed a single, unspeakable act of violence—an act so shocking its legacy lives still.

And now, long after the horror of that night has faded to a tale whispered by children around summer camp fires, an unholy terror is about to be reborn.

Now, one family is about to feel the icy hand of supernatural fear—as Melissa Holloway, shy and troubled and just thirteen years old, comes to know the blood-drenched secret that waits behind a locked attic door... For in the dead of night a Secret Cove sleeps unaware, a soul-chilling presence slowly begins to enact a terrifying vengeance.

Second Child: It is unspeakable evil merely Melissa's nightmares made horrifyingly real? Is it the manifestation of deadly fury risen from the grave? Or is the heart-stopping horror soon to be unleased in Secret Cove something even more insidious--something unimaginably evil...and alive?

355 pages, Mass Market Paperback

First published January 1, 1990

106 people are currently reading
4058 people want to read

About the author

John Saul

149 books2,830 followers
John Saul is an American author best known for his bestselling suspense and horror novels, many of which have appeared on The New York Times Best Seller list. Born in Pasadena and raised in Whittier, California, Saul attended several universities without earning a degree. He spent years honing his craft, writing under pen names before finding mainstream success. His breakout novel, Suffer the Children (1977), launched a prolific career, with over 60 million copies of his books in print. Saul’s work includes Cry for the Strangers, later adapted into a TV movie, and The Blackstone Chronicles series. He is also a playwright, with one-act plays produced in Los Angeles and Seattle. In 2023, he received the Bram Stoker Award for Lifetime Achievement. Openly gay, he has lived with his partner—also his creative collaborator—for nearly 50 years. Saul divides his time between Seattle, the San Juan Islands, and Hawaii, and frequently speaks at writers’ conferences, including the Maui Writers' Conference. His enduring popularity in the horror genre stems from a blend of psychological tension, supernatural elements, and deep emotional undercurrents that have resonated with readers for decades.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 298 reviews
Profile Image for Peter.
4,071 reviews799 followers
July 26, 2018
After many years I came back for an old John Saul novel I missed back then and wasn't disappointed. There is no other author mixing appaling family secrets with horror and ghost appearances like John Saul. You really feel for Melissa and Cora hate Phyllis and cant' believe the stunning details you read about Teri and her former family. Everything takes places in a small village world of inhterited money, a very plausible setting, even today. What about D'Arcy? An absolute page turner with interesting characters and an author who really knows how to write a bestseller. The tension here is nailbiting until the very end. You get the meaning of the title in the last sentence of the book! Highly recommended not only for summer. A real John Saul classic. Reading this books shivers will run down your spine.
Profile Image for Sandra.
745 reviews6 followers
July 20, 2020
When Charles Holloway’s ex-wife Polly and her husband die in a fire in their home, Charles brings his pretty daughter Teri (who has been living with her mother Polly for years) to his home at Secret Cove, to live. Charles is now remarried to a woman named Phyllis and has another daughter, in which he dotes on, called Melissa. Charles and his ex-wife Polly were raised with money and had been living in a posh town called Secret Cove. Polly didn’t like the trappings of wealth, moved away, remarried, and gave her money away. Years later, Polly’s daughter Teri resented this. She felt she should be at Secret Cove, receiving the finer things in life.

Teri arrives at Secret Cove and meets her shy half-sister Melissa (who is ridiculed and mocked because she doesn’t fit in… she’s a bit overweight, shy, plain.) Melissa is happy to now have a sister. She’s quite lonely. Add to that, she has a very cruel mother (Phyllis) who abuses her.

There is talk, told by children around campfires at night, about a ghost called D’Arcy who also didn’t fit in. A hundred years ago a terrible thing happened at the August Moon Ball. Now, on the anniversary of that day, is D’Arcy back for revenge?

John Saul really knows how to write captivating stories. I had a hard time putting this book down, I always wanted to know what was going to happen next. Some of the characters were very likable… Melissa, her father Charles, the maid Cora, and Cora’s grandson Tag. And some characters were really horrible. Especially Melissa’s mother Phyllis, the snobbish kids at Secret Cove, and Melissa’s half-sister Teri, who isn’t as sweet as she seemed. I also liked the setting of the coastal town.

Another engrossing and compelling read by John Saul.
Profile Image for Chris Berko.
484 reviews145 followers
November 4, 2020
John Saul never disappoints. It's been decades since I have read anything by him but I do remember I love his endings. Black Creek Crossing's end haunts me to this day. For Halloween my mom recommended this to me she said she remembered it scaring her way back when. This was a little bit Mean Girls, a little bit Heathers, a little Cinderella, a little bit Carrie and a lotta bit awesome. There was so much happening in the final one hundred pages that I kept thinking, okay this is it, this is the finale, but then it kept going and going. By the time it truly ended I was tense AF but it was totally worth it. Saul nails the landing and lives up to reputation.
Profile Image for Mark.
Author 1 book4 followers
April 30, 2012
What a shame that some of the reviewers here have given away the plot!

I haven't read Second Child for a long time but I often think about getting it off the shelf once more.

Melissa, the second child of the title, is overjoyed when she discovers that her unknown elder sister Teri is coming to live with her father's new family at Secret Cove. What Melissa can't foresee is the horror and confusion that the beautiful Teri's arrival will bring to her own life, nor how her supposedly imaginary friend D'arcy will shatter the peace of the wealthy coastal community as she exacts revenge for an act committed one hundred years earlier.

Second Child is a terrific read - well worth being given a chance. Others here have criticised Saul's style - my main gripe as a reader of several of Saul's novels is that each seems to contain a character called Jeff! If that's my only real gripe, he ain't doing bad ...
Profile Image for Rachel.
19 reviews8 followers
February 21, 2013
This was the first book I read by John Saul. I was maybe 13 at the time and I found it in a basement. I was bored and figured I'd read. I opened it out of curiosity and was yanked in by the the first line- "When Polly MacIver awoke just before dawn that morning, she had not the slightest presentiment that she was about to die."
I devoured it and it scared the shit out of me. This is not what I call a 'visually' scary book. Saul does a good job with scene setting and you can easily imagine whatever is currently happening. This book is psychologically scary. It got into my mind and almost made me question what I felt.
I've read this book quite a few times over the years and it has never failed to freak me out on some level.
Profile Image for Vicky.
896 reviews71 followers
July 5, 2015
The one thing I hated was how unbelievably stupid the father was.
Profile Image for Space.
224 reviews26 followers
July 30, 2016
I read this one based on someone's recommendation, and was not at all unhappy with it. I did find, though, that I didn't like the author or his style. He seems a little amateur. He would find a word he liked, like 'sear' and he'd use it a boatload of times in just a few pages - noticeably. I don't like that. He does that all throughout the book. Altogether, this isn't a major thing, but coupled with his overuse of dialog attribution, and his severe POV shifts, I really felt let down. This seemed to me to be a great story, with a lot of potential, but he effed it all up trying to tell it. He switches point of view several times a page in some cases, and without warning. I lose touch of the characters when authors do it, and it's not like a professional writer to do that.

The story: It's about a girl whose house burns down, killing her mother and stepfather, so she is forced to go live with her father and his wife. Well, they have a child of their own. And the stepmother, this witch, is very happy about the other daughter coming to live with them. She's the daughter this woman always wanted, and didn't have in her first one. She treats her own daughter horribly, to the point of near-abuse, but she really takes in this other girl. And stuff starts happening. They find out that things aren't what they had originally seemed. And the stuff hits the fan.

All together, the story was great, like I said. But it had a very weak ending. He supported the entire story (which I read in four nights) with suspense and guessing. I loved it. Then he let me down at the end, as if he just got sick of telling the story, and gave up. It was totally unlike the rest of the book, and given the circumstances, very unbelievable. It was - well, the ending was just plain crap. I wouldn't recommend this book, and on my book reviews page, I gave the storyline three stars.
Profile Image for Kurt Reichenbaugh.
Author 5 books80 followers
March 24, 2019
This is the first John Saul novel I've read. I had friends back in the late 70's and early 80's who liked his novels, but none of them appealed to me at the time. Looking at the plots back then, they all seemed to be the same type of novel about "haunted" children. I'm not a big fan of novels with children as the main protagonists. Teenagers and older are fine, but kids under 12 with ESP or telekinesis, or the ability to communicate with ghosts don't appeal to me. They never seem real. They're too wise or too cute or too whatever. So, I skipped John Saul books until now. This one features a 13 year old girl named Melissa who talks to a ghost named D'Arcy. That was a big hurdle for me, until the teenagers, namely her older half-sister Teri and a group of snotty rich kids from central casting, come into the plot.

At 35o pages it's kind of a slow burn. There isn't really anything more to the characters beyond their basic urges. But it's a commercial horror novel, and as such it delivers. When the blurb on the cover quotes PEOPLE magazine, you know it's going to be a digestible product for the masses. And there's nothing wrong with that. Whatever gets people reading books is a good thing. I did admire some of the surprise twists in the last 70 pages. So, all in all, Second Child succeeds in its expectations.
Profile Image for Richard K. Wilson.
749 reviews129 followers
September 24, 2020
Dont, I say DON'T go to the August Harvest Moon Ball and expect to have a wonderful time.....EVIL will be attending this year! Another incredibly gruesome ghost story from the master of suspense Horror!

Okay, so a month or so ago on my Youtube Channel; AreYouIntoHorror? I started to reread of all the Horror novels by my favorite Horror author John Saul in publication order and I called it 'The John Saul Horror Reading Challenge' and this is book #13 in that challenge.....so hang on and get ready for my Vintage review of John Saul's 1990 classic (in my opinion only that is, and Larry Yonce's) "Second Child".

As in a lot of Sauls works there is a 'many years ago' prologue and that was always one of the reasons why i loved reading his books, they set me up for the horrors and suspense and revenge horrors to come my way....and this one had one of those. 100 years ago, at the August Moon Ball a young and very beautiful servant girl is set up to be the butt of a joke, and it turns into a deadly display of horror that the people of Secret Cove never ever forget!!! You are told this story very early in the book as newcomer to town, 14 year old Terri experiences at her first bonfire on the beach party that she and her younger sister Melissa attend, which is hosted the most popular boy at school and the one that Teri is obsessed with knowing. It is the party of all parties and the one that changes these two sisters lives and the town forever! The town is small and very wealthy and some very 'snobby and snotty people live there' and Teri soon fits right in. Upon moving into her new 'new family's mansion' she realizes their wealth and quickly takes advantage of being able to spend what ever she wants of her Daddy's money etc. However Melissa being the shy and not well liked one of the two, would rather spend time in her room with her 'friend' D'Arcy. Is is just a coincidence that Darcy was also the name of the servant girl who was the butt of a bloody and terrifying joke 100 years ago at the August Moon Ball? And who will be going to their first ball this year....both Teri and Melissa.

Saul never ever ceases to thrill and scare the shit out of me with the gift of writing very well. If you have never read John Saul, this is where you could easily start to be a fan. Trigger Warning:
You will witness animal abuse and murder, but only once and quickly.

So just remember that if you are invited to the August Moon Ball, do NOT wear Emerald Green, and dont befriend Darcy!

Pick it up, you will not regret it!
Profile Image for Bren fall in love with the sea..
1,955 reviews474 followers
May 24, 2019
Was not for me. I went a long time without reading Saul who was a favorite of mine in my teen years. I wanted to give him a chance by reading one of his newer books. (Well..it was new at the time I first read it.)

This book however did not do it for me and I hate saying that because I still consider myself a John Saul fan and often reread some of my all time faves from him.

Second child falls along the creepy scale but lacks the subtle atmospheric brooding quality that so much of his works has and that is what immersed me so much about him.

Here the horror starts pretty much on the first page. The really isn't any build up or lead up or anything. It did not feel like the John Saul I adored. It could have been any horror novel about children. I was really let down.

I see by some of the glowing reviews that not all people feel that way and that is good. Second Child was a quick read for me but not one that I feel I will come back to as I didn't particularly like it.
Profile Image for Peter.
381 reviews27 followers
October 11, 2015
This is a story about Teri, who burnt down the house that she lived in, killing her mother and her stepfather. With the death of her mother, Teri is force to move to Secret Cove, with her father and his wife. Charles and Phyllis already have one daughter Melissa. Melissa is always being abused by her mother and can never do anything right. On the other hand, Teri is daughter that she always dreamed of having. Melissa has been sleepwalking for as long as she can remember. Her evil mother sometimes ties her down in bed to prevent her from sleepwalking. Melissa has an imaginary friend D'Arcy, who protect her at night from the evil that goes on in the house. Teri fits in perfectly with the rich brats of Secret Cove. None of these kids like Melissa and they are always picking on her. Phyllis always says to Melissa, why can't you be more like Teri! When evil things start to happen in Secret Cove, the terror is non stop. The characters are well developed and this makes for a stronger story line. John Saul is worth checking out.
Profile Image for Phil.
2,430 reviews236 followers
March 6, 2020
This is a deeply disturbing novel by Saul, and one of his best. The story centers upon a family in a rich resort town in Maine. The father Charles was born to wealth and divorced his society wife shortly after they had a child and married the nursemaid (who was carrying his child). His second child was the love of his life, but not his new wife, who makes mommy dearest look like a poster child on how to raise a child. After a 'tragic' fire that kills her parents, the first child moves in with her father and now stepmom in Maine. The second child never fit in with the 'in' crowd at the resort, but the first child takes to it like she was born to it. Lots of graphic scenes of child abuse and utterly ruthless actions by several people, this makes you want to seriously question the human condition.
Profile Image for Melissa M.
36 reviews
January 14, 2021
John Saul never disappoints! I rate 4 stars only because I feel like the story was wrapped up too quickly. I am thankful for the epilogue, but I certainly wouldn’t have minded hearing more about Phyllis’s reaction, if Melissa’s name was cleared of the things “she” admitted to, etc. In other words, I guess I just wasn’t ready for it to end! I’d recommend to anyone in the mood for a chilling ghost story full of suspense...and well-deserved revenge!
Profile Image for Katelyn Miller.
55 reviews19 followers
May 28, 2017
This was recommended to me by someone in a Facebook group for fans of a horror podcast, so I figured it'd be pretty creepy. I also figured it would be written for adults. I can't really say conclusively that it fulfilled either of those expectations. In the book's favor, reading it was just like watching a late 80's/early 90's horror movie. Like, I could vividly picture it in my head, down to the film quality. And it certainly had some spooky aspects! I think that's what was most frustrating for me-- it had all the ingredients of a good horror story, but it never delivered! There was no big climactic scare! (Or any small scares for that matter.) Nothing that'll make me check my closet before I go to bed at night, which is what I was hoping for.

What this book really was was an exercise in restrained frustration. 2 of the 4 main characters are bone-deep evil, and they keep brutally victimizing the most innocent character possible. I spent 80% of the book waiting for the ghost (who may or may not even exist) to drop the damn hammer, and it just NEVER HAPPENS. To offer as few spoilers as possible, good does (mostly) prevail in the end, but if you like seeing the villains get punished and the truth come to light in one beautiful damning reveal...this is not the book for you.

I also took issue with the writing in a lot of places, just because there were strangely amateur mistakes throughout. Reusing the same word or phrase over and over in one section was a big problem. ("Indeed, it looked as if," two sentences later, "He saw that indeed it was..." Then "Even as she watched, the servants," and in the next paragraph, "He saw that the servants, even as he watched..." I'm paraphrasing, but "indeed" and "even as (s)he watched" are two actual examples I remember distinctly.) Also, random little continuity errors. Someone sitting up sits up again. A woman says something tactless and is kicked under the table by...herself. It was all just distracting, although, to be fair, I welcomed the distraction from the monotony of the plot. A bad thing happens and no one finds out, the victim is screwed over, repeat x 10, finish with 99% of the should've-been-satisfying retribution happening off-screen, and there you have it. That's the book. I can't in good conscience say it's a BAD book, but it's not a particularly good one, and it's definitely not a scary one.
91 reviews9 followers
January 3, 2010
Money, love, jealousy, and murder are the topics of this story in my opinion. How people try to live up to the standards of other and portray themselves as someone they actually are not, and it doesn't matter who they hurt in the process as long as they are getting what it is that they themselves want. A girl ends up moving in with her father and stepmother and step sister after her real mother and stepfather die in a blazing house fire. She befriends her step sister (under falseness) and begins to "suck up" to her step mother, whom used to be her nanny when she was little before the divorce of her real parents. After she moves in with her real father, things started happening. She was fitting in with the high class country club people that her step mother and sister never really fit in to. This was all based on her real mothers past of being "born" into that particular class. After the divorce, her mother gave all of her wealth to a charity and up until now her daughter felt like she has been left out of the "rich life". Her step sister has been labeled "CRAZY" by all of the people in the neighborhood and club, even her own mother thinks she is crazy and abuses her. After the move in with her father, things start to happen; abuse, dead dogs, murders...... all in all a good story. It kept my attention all the way til the end, but I think the ending could have been a lot better. I feel like the author, John Saul, kind of took the easy way out of ending it and did what was expected in the readers mind. I feel there was not enough closure on many of the topics that had occurred in the story.
Profile Image for Ana.
811 reviews717 followers
October 5, 2012
NOTE : see this review and more on http://cocainepages.wordpress.com

Oh well I wish I'd have been able to give it even three stars, but I can't. So this gets a well deserved "it was ok" status.

I remember that after I read a book of Saul's, for the first time, I was so excited! He seemed to be such a good author, and I really liked the way he presented things! But I think what I read then was a lucky shot, because up to now everything else I've read from him turned out to be not so good!

He still knows how to tell a story, and he still has "the flow". But that flow ain't nothing compared to the "Midas touch" some other horror authors have. He lacks.. interest. I can't put it another way. I just can't seem to get interested in his stories as much as I do in others!

If you are a fan of Saul's, I don't mean to offend you. I can understand why people would like him. But I believe he is just not for me.

"Second Child" is a hurtful story about a girl that is being mentally and physically abused by the people that should love her the most, and how because of that, a dark spirit takes over her body and mind messes her life up. Cute, but not exactly horror. I'd say not even thriller. If someone started reading it to me at night, I'd sleep like a bear in the middle of the winter.
Profile Image for Dave Edmunds.
339 reviews249 followers
January 10, 2021
*Looking back, I originally rated this one slightly too high. It's not the same quality as some of the really impressive stories I've read this year. Need to knock it down a star*

This was my second foray into the world of John Saul after reading the fantastic Suffer the Children earlier in the year. This is another ghost story with a twist. Actually there's a few twists that keep the suspense up and tension high. It focuses on an evil twin and a supernatural element, but that's as far as I'll go. I wouldn't want to spoil the surprise.

After a good opening start, things do slow down and it develops into a teenage angst drama. I was starting to feel let down, but then things pick up nicely and I really enjoyed the second half. This is stuff you need to know as a reader. Is this book worth sticking with? Yes it is.

So after thinking this book was going to scrape a three, it's a comfortable four. Now to pick my next read from the John Saul collection. Any tips would be appreciated!
Profile Image for Aurora Dimitre.
Author 39 books154 followers
July 31, 2013
I went into this book knowing almost absolutely nothing and it seriously blew my mind.

It would be almost impossible to explain it without spoiling anything - short story, Teri MacIver's parents die in a fire and she's sent to live with her real father in a huge house in a nice little Maine retreat, where she lives with her stepmother and halfsister. There's a ghost, some child abuse, and a lot of death that I probably should have expected but still took me by surprise.

I really liked this book. It was entertaining, unpredictable, and the characters were all interesting enough. I've only read one other book by John Saul, Creature, and while this didn't quite measure up to that, it was still a great book. I thoroughly enjoyed it.
92 reviews2 followers
March 22, 2018
Let me start by saying, it scares the crap out of me to think there are actually people like this walking around. EVIL. I HATED a couple of these characters. H.A.T.E.D.! I got so frustrated reading this book; somebody besides me HAD to see what was going on! What the heck, dad!? Maybe that's why this took me so long to get through it.
That being said, and without dropping any spoilers, I’ll just say I was happy to see how it ended, although this was another one of those that seemed to very quickly tie itself up with a pretty bow. I somewhat expected one part of the ending; was happily surprised by another; was still hoping for worse for another.
Profile Image for Tabi.
148 reviews6 followers
May 2, 2024
Second Child by John Saul was entertaining at times, but mostly it felt cliche and forced. I didn't believe or connect with the characters, so unfortunately ultimately I couldn't feel engaged to the story. The first 50 pages or so got me curious, as I felt a mystery was being slowly presented and I wanted to see how things would play out. But then towards the middle of the book it all started getting really annoying. By the final chapters I didn't really care that much anymore.
Profile Image for Dani.
60 reviews1 follower
March 17, 2009
Oh my god, all I remember about this book (I read it when I was 11), was that it SCARED THE SHIT OUT OF ME!!!
Profile Image for Jessica Montgomery.
2 reviews
September 1, 2011
I liked it up until the ending. I felt the way the author chose to finish the book was a cop out and he chose the easiest way to tie up the loose ends.
170 reviews1 follower
December 19, 2013
Spooky, but the ending felt a bit rushed.
Profile Image for Erin *Proud Book Hoarder*.
2,959 reviews1,192 followers
May 10, 2020
I remember John Saul as being cheesier and less coherent, but this was surprisingly good. Review to come. Poor Melissa, there were several things going on with the story at once which supported it.
Profile Image for Kyle.
Author 15 books47 followers
April 3, 2023
You know, a part of me feels like I should give this five stars just because it managed to keep me invested despite a change of hyperfixation - and if you know me, that usually means I lose all interest in anything outside of my new interest.

Unfortunately, there are just enough flaws for me to justify that lost star.

This was my first Saul. I enjoyed it, and I think I'll be getting more of his stuff in future.

After her mum and stepdad die in a house fire, Teri goes to love with her dad, stepmum, and half-sister. Her sister is a neurotic girl, the stepmum is overbearing, and the dad is coddling. She prepares to settle into a new lavish lifestyle.

But Teri is more than she seems, and there's something weird going on with her sister too.

I found myself pretty invested in this book, mainly because I felt really sorry for Melissa - the half-sister. She thinks she's getting what she's always wanted - a sister - but her life just becomes a living hell.

I won't spoil too much there, though.

It's worth mentioning, though, that this is a story that involves child abuse. Teri is the daughter the stepmum wished Melissa would be, and she tried her hardest to mould Melissa into someone she's not.

God, I wanted the stepmum to die - is that bad? Maybe, but that's just how awful she was.

There's also some animal abuse in here, and that was a difficult scene to read, but it felt like it fit the story - especially the personality of the perpetrator.

It's a weird one. Sometimes it meanders. Sometimes things happen very fast. One of my biggest problems was that the end, especially, just kind of happened. Everything got resolved in a chapter or two, and I almost wish the book was longer to explore some of the themes a bit more.

It also gave away its twists kind of early, and it was quick to explain stuff despite only raising the questions in the previous chapter. That being said, there's still one bit I'm not entirely sure on, but asking that question here would just be a spoiler.

What's interesting is I don't know whether it was a ghost story or a psychological story. There is talk of ghosts, but it also suggests that all the paranormal stuff is just in people's heads. Maybe it's both.

I just wish things had been wrapped up a bit neater at the end. So yeah, I'd say it's a good story with a lacklustre ending, and that's where it loses a star.
Profile Image for Joanna.
141 reviews102 followers
May 13, 2019
I kolejna (piąta już!) świetna książka Johna Saula za mną. W “Drugim dziecku” jak i w większości powieści autora głównymi bohaterami są creepy dzieci - w tym przypadku dwie przyrodnie siostry. Opis wydawcy jest wielce mylący - sugerując się nim myślałam, że wiem, która z dziewcząt będzie tą dziwaczną i niepokojącą, a która normalną. I tu - już na pierwszych 20 stronach spotkało mnie pierwsze zaskoczenie - okazało się, że nie jest to kolejny schematyczny horror o morderczych dzieciach, którego całą fabułę możemy przewidzieć już po pierwszym rozdziale. Co to, to nie! Czytając nie miałam pojęcia co przyniesie każda kolejna strona. Kiedy domyślałam się, że wydarzenia pójdą w tym a tym kierunku, to Saul wyskakiwał z zupełnie innym rozwiązaniem - różnym o 180 stopni od tego, co ja przewidywałam. Wszystkie te niespodzianki sprawiły, że “Dziecko” okazało się dla mnie powieścią nieodkładalną, praktycznie czytało się samo aż do ostatniej strony. A i tu - na ostatniej stronie, w ostatnim zdaniu autor zapodał kolejną bombę! Uwierzcie mi - nawet nie próbujcie przewidzieć fabuły tej książki, i tak Wam to się nie uda. Horrory Saula pomimo, że często opowiadają o nieletnich bohaterach, to zdecydowanie są skierowane do starszego czytelnika. Autor nie szczędzi makabrycznych i szczegółowych opisów brutalnych zbrodni czy rozkładających się ciał. Jednak to nie te krwawe opisy najbardziej przerażają w “Drugim dziecku”. Straszne i niepojęte jest to, jak okrutne i bezduszne są niektóre postaci - i to najbliższa rodzina. Pomimo, że książka wciąga, to jednak czyta się ją ciężko - właśnie ze względu na bestialskie i potworne, momentami wręcz sadystyczne zachowania bohaterów. “Drugie dziecko” to nie lekki wakacyjny horrorek, a bardzo przygnębiająca i smutna powieść, która niezwykle silnie oddziałuje na emocje.
Profile Image for Alistair Cross.
Author 53 books195 followers
September 27, 2021
Second Child, John Saul, 1990

My favorite quote: “But though her lips smiled warmly as she accepted the embrace, her eyes -- had anyone noticed -- betrayed an emotionless chill."

Notable characters: Melissa Holloway, a shy young girl; Teri MacIver, her older half-sister; D’Arcy, Melissa’s not-so-imaginary friend; Phyllis Holloway, the horrible mother; Charles, the excruciatingly unobservant father

Most memorable scene: Well, if not Polly MacIver sailing to her death in the opening scene (is it just me or do a lot of John Saul characters sail to their deaths in early scenes?) I’ll have to go with the unearthly visitation Cyndi Miller and Ellen Stevens receive in the woods on their way home from the beach

Greatest strengths: Pacing

Standout achievements: To me, it feels like there are shades of Hush, Hush, Sweet Charlotte, Carrie, and even the Exorcist here, and yet Second Child manages to feel fresh and original. I’d call that a definite standout achievement

Fun Facts: I’ve had the pleasure of meeting John Saul ... and he’s every bit as awesome as I’d hoped he’d be!

Other media: N/A

What it taught me: That even the most classic trope can feel brand-new if it’s executed well

How it inspired me: Opening lines are everything and this book -- along with Dean Koontz’s Servants of Twilight -- has one of the best ones ever. In fact, I had no real interest in Second Child until I read it’s first sentence: "When Polly MacIver awoke just before dawn that morning, she had not the slightest presentiment that she was about to die." After that, I had to know more. I think about that every time I start writing a new book

Additional thoughts: I think this is one of Saul’s stronger works. It feels a lot more inspired than a lot of his stuff

Haunt me: alistaircross.com
Profile Image for Paige Richards.
510 reviews1 follower
June 6, 2025
I feel weird even giving this a starred rating. This was a wild time capsule of a novel.

But first, a sidebar, I read a Grady Hendrix review about Saul saying John Saul is actually two people, the face of the name and the husband who actually wrote? I didn't find a ton to totally vouch that but I kind of love that idea. lol

Sooo this book was like high stakes drama in every possible way. We've got a hella dramatic death in the first chapters of the book - such a way to set the tone, we have a totally evil teenage girl with a hotness card that gets her a pass in every single avenue (I guess) and a Mommy Dearest wannabe. Abusive families, multiple personalities ft. a ghost girl and a never ending loop of "evil knowing looks at the camera" if you can catch my drift.

I don't think it was a good book necessarily but it was a fun read. Like watching a B-horror movie that doesn't quite hold up but is fun to watch anyway.
Profile Image for Den Alessandra.
11 reviews
October 8, 2017
I. Love. It.

My favorite characters are D'Arcy and Melissa! What I like are the spooky chapters! The book is now my fave book of all the horrifying books! The important thing I learned about is be nice and be good to people and animals and never harm/murder them! Because you'll never know if they have a ghost friend who will make you pay for every wrong thing you ever done! And you'll suffer in hell just like mean Teri! Melissa has no mean bone in her body so be like Melissa!

Thank you John for writing this wicked book called The Second Child! If you're reading this! Please write another The Second Child part two book! I shall give this book a big thumbs up and five stars! John you deserve a reward for writing the best horror books thank you so much! 📚
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