Playmates
By Andrew Neiderman
1987 Berkley
Paperback, 312 pages
Stacey
and her daughter Tami are driving through New York State to her husband David,
who is working on a project near the Catskills. The planned vacation disappears
when Stacy takes a shortcut and the car breaks down, forcing them to seek help
from a nearby farmhouse. The residents of the house are nuts and they abduct
the mother and child, starting off 312 pages of grueling, nail-biting,
frustrating suspense.
That is literally the prologue. This book throws you right
into turmoil in the opening pages and it doesn’t
let up until the very end. Of course, David goes to search for his family, and
he has enlisted the help of “Chicky” Ross, a quirky,
local detective. The Thompson family in the secluded house are a real
treat, with papa Gerald, insane mom Irene and the
cruel daughter Shirley. They torture the mother and daughter relentlessly. You see Irene thinks they are two other people, a mother and daughter that they had disposed
of a few years prior.
The book
gives us plenty of moments of wincing and squirming as well as a few genuine
chills. This is how a “held captive” book should work, unlike Stephen King’s
shit-tastic, bloated Gerald’s Game which made me wish I had never
started it. This is a page-turner that never lets up on the tension and never
lets you put down your guard. The characters are well
defined with revealing background stories, except for Irene, but the lack of
backstory works in her case, as she is just bat-shit crazy.
Neiderman
wrote several quality horror books, in particular Pin, which was made
into a movie in 1988. Around the time he wrote Playmates, he started
ghost-writing for V.C. Andrews after her death and has done so for over three
decades. He is the master of writing fucked-up families, and they don’t come much more fucked up than the Thompsons.
This Berkley edition has a nice, embossed Richard Newton cover, though you
should also keep an eye out for the Time-Warner UK version. The book was made
into a movie in 1995 called The Maddening starring Burt Reynolds and
Angie Dickinson and there is a tie-in edition for that as well.