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Mr. X
Mr. X
Mr. X
Audiobook19 hours

Mr. X

Written by Peter Straub

Narrated by Luke Daniels and Patrick Lawlor

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

For more than two decades Peter Straub has engrossed, entertained, and terrified us with his dazzling blend of cool artistry and mad, spine-tingling imagination. With Mr. X, the bestselling author of Ghost Story, The Talisman (with Stephen King), and The Hellfire Club takes us into the darkest dimensions of the human psyche and proves once again that he is without peer in the realm of psychological suspense and horror, a master storyteller whose unique and powerful gifts qualify him to be called the Edgar Allan Poe of our times.

Mr. X is Straub's original and startling take on the theme of the doppelgänger. Ned Dunstan's birthday is fast approaching, and every year on this date, Ned experiences a paralyzing seizure in which he is forced to witness scenes of ruthless slaughter perpetrated by a mysterious and malevolent figure in black whom Ned calls Mr. X.

Ned has been drawn back to his hometown, Edgerton, Illinois, by a premonition that his mother, Star, is dying. Before she loosens her hold on life, she imparts to Ned the name of his father, never before disclosed, and warns him that he is in grave danger. Despite her foreboding, Ned's determination to learn as much as possible about his absent father ignites a series of extraordinary adventures that gradually reveal the heart of both his own identity and that of his entirely fantastic family: He discovers that he is shadowed by an identical twin brother who can pass through doors and otherwise defy the laws of nature; he becomes the lead suspect in three violent deaths; he investigates the secret shadow-world within Edgerton; he learns to "eat time" and remembers the one occasion when he and his sinister brother united into a single being. Finally, at the moment of battle, he must call upon everything he has learned to save his own life.

Brimming with the author's trademark wit, understated eloquence, vibrant characters, and brilliant sense of pace, Mr. X displays Peter Straub at the top of his form.

LanguageEnglish
Release dateMar 1, 2012
ISBN9781455830053
Mr. X
Author

Peter Straub

Peter Straub (1943–2022) was the #1 New York Times bestselling author of more than a dozen novels, including A Dark Matter, The Talisman, and Black House, which he cowrote with Stephen King. He has won the Bram Stoker Award for his novels Lost Boy Lost Girl and In the Night Room, as well as for his collection 5 Stories. Straub was the editor of the two-volume Library of American anthology The American Fantastic Tale.

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Reviews for Mr. X

Rating: 3.5604395384615386 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

182 ratings9 reviews

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  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Too much violence towards children for me. Disappointed, I like this Straub's other books.

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 1 out of 5 stars
    1/5
    Great children’s book. Wonder if he writes for adults. Reader did a good job for what he had to work with.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I'm not really sure how to classify this book, part paranormal, part horror, part mystery it was an interesting read. I initially found it a bit hard to get into but after 50 of the 620 pages had passed I had a decent layout of things in my head and started to enjoy how things were unfolding. It's a bit of an odd one in that the blurb doesn't really give a good picture of what the story is really about, it's far better and complicated than the blurb would leave you to believe.Overall, an interesting story of family history with a paranormal touch.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I really, thoroughly enjoyed this book. Rarely do I read a book that doesn't make me want to skim the minutiae, but this is one. My favorite aspect of it, though, is the characters. Even the tiniest bit parts are interesting and colorful and not two dimensional. The ending was thought provoking. I think, if you like Clive Barker, H. P. Lovecraft, and don't insist that every book has to be horrific, you'll like this book.

    (it should probably be noted - my mother did find this book gruesome and horrific, but to me it was more just a dark fantasy. And she watches a lot of horror movies. So, I guess what I'm saying is, it's probably best to read this when you are open to letting it be whatever kind of book it's going to be to you.)
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    At heart this dark fantasy novel is about the twisted truths that lie at the heart of one's family history and whether it's better to leave secrets buried or dig them up. Peter Straub does an amazing job of unraveling pieces of information that slowly form into at larger picture. His characters are complex and fascinating, which makes the story absolutely compelling with an ending that kind of blew my mind and makes me want to go back and read it again. Fantastic book.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    Straub is an extraordinarily literate writer who occasionally produces rich, complex stories like Ghost Story and Floating Dragon, and occasionally produces muddled messes like this one. Every time I started to get into the story, something confusing would throw me right out, and the ending was a thoroughly unsatisfying twist out of left field. (And when will horror writers get over their obsession with H.P. Lovecraft?)
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    In Mr. X, Peter Straub writes about identity, family and the way the past influences our present. The book moves swiftly through the first of its six sections in which it describes the protagonist's childhood and draws the reader into a wonderful sense of mystery. And mystery is something that the life of Ned Dunstan, our protagonist, is full of. There is the strange premonition he gets of his mother's impending death; the question of his father, a man he has never met and about whom his mother has refused to talk; the feeling of missing something or someone in his life; and finally, the terrible attacks he has had every year on his birthday, starting when he was three years old. Only Ned knows, however, that what other people see as seizure-like episodes, he experiences as vividly real dreams. In these dreams, he witnesses terrible crimes committed by a strange figure dressed in a black coat and hat, a bogeyman he identifies with the name of Mr. X.Interspersed with Ned's narrative are journal entries from Mr. X himself. Mr. X describes his own childhood and how he discovered he had certain supernatural powers. This was later followed by a revelation that he was descended from beings known as the Great Old Ones to help bring about their reign on earth. He later discovers those same entities in the fiction of weird writer H.P. Lovecraft, becomes obsessed with the author and begins to believe that the stories are prophetic. The premonition of his mother's death has brought Ned back to his hometown of Edgerton, where he spends time with his aunts and uncles as well as some of his mother's old friends. He also begins to search for the father he never knew and becomes embroiled in a local businessman's shady dealings. As you can see, there are a lot of elements here, and had Straub managed to blend them well, it would make for a real tour-de-force.One central problem is Mr. X, who makes an effectively creepy villain for a little while but becomes less frightening the more journal entries we read. About a third of the way into the novel I came to the conclusion that Mr. X was easily the dorkiest of the Bastard Spawn of the Great Old Ones I had ever encountered. (Mr. X would probably suffer some Cyclopean wedgies at the hands of Wilbur Whateley.) There's something to be said for bogeymen willing to be quietly ominous, or one's who know how to rant in ways that reinforce their air of menace instead of undermining it. Passages such as these just ruin much of the tension:"I once again propose--envision--a Valhallah-like Museum of the Elder Gods. The Record of my adventures, opened to this very page of the Boorum & Pease journal, lies installed upon a likeness of my table alongside a replica of my Mont-Blanc (medium-point) pen in a diorama-like affair a few steps or slithers beyond a representation of the Master's own desk and writing implements."Straub's characterization doesn't just misfire when it comes to the villain; I found myself pretty bored with all of the characters. Ned is compelling as a confused young man beset by mystery but less so as a pulp detective figure hunting down the various threads of family and criminal intrigue. His aunts and uncles are a motley crew who are meant to be sort of charming in their weirdness, but every time one of them said some variation on 'We are Dunstans' to reference the family's low standing in Edgerton, they drifted closer to self-parody. (There have always been Dunstans in Cold Comfort Farm, after all.) Ned also has a love interest, Laurie Hatch, who is tangentially connected to the criminal dealings. (She's the husband of a local, corrupt businessman.) She has a cute kid with musical talent and is quite sexy in a panther-like sort of way but sadly lacks much in the way of a personality.The lack of engaging characters ends up undermining what would otherwise have been the novel's strengths. For example, Straub's prose is often quite nice and literary, such as when he describes Ned and Laurie's lovemaking thus:"Some of the women I had known may have been more passionate than Laurie, but none were more gracefully attuned to the capacity of each individual moment to spread its wings and glide into the next. She also had the gift of what some would call a dirty mind and others inventiveness. The more we explored our bodies and celebrated their abilities, the more unified we became until we seemed to pour into each other and become a single, profoundly interconnected thing."It's nicely written and would be almost transcendent if I felt some connection to the characters, but since I don't it just seemed sort of purple to me, high-toned Harlequin romance.This deleterious effect also extends to the novel's twists. We learn three different backstories for Laurie, and if she were a character I had cared about, I would have been struck with a feeling of suspense and wanting to know which was true. I didn't really care, though, and so felt that reading one backstory was punishment enough. Other twists were undermined by Straub's decision to riff off certain elements of Lovecraft's 'The Dunwich Horror.' This isn't bad on its own, but since I was familiar with the original, it gave me a strong sense of what was coming up.As much as I like Lovecraft's fiction (which was one motivation for reading Mr. X), I think Straub erred in incorporating the homage into this novel. Using Lovecraftian elements without matching Lovecraft's sense of the cosmic can be a bit of a gamble, and here the effect is to highlight the soap opera feeling of the material. Overall, the Lovecraft homages seem poorly thought out. Straub throws in some Lovecraft Easter Eggs which don't really add much and which the average reader won't get, but then he writes a library scene (a stock element in many Lovecraft tales) which falls so flat that one wonders why he bothered.Though there is much that doesn't work, the novel is not without its strengths. Straub's prose has its usual polished middlebrow quality. Edgerton--especially its seedier side--really comes alive sometimes. There also a certain audacity to all the twistiness, which I probably would have enjoyed if I had engaged more with the characters or didn't know what to expect. Overall, though, this is not one of Straub's best.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Very subtle and sophisticated--a nice companion piece to something like "The Secret Sharer," but very slow starting and not as entertaining as Straub's best books. I'm not sure this book came off quite as well as Straub hoped, but he clearly had high aspirations for it. Plus, the book references Lovecraft quite a lot, and I just don't understand the fascination with Lovecraft.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This novel has some parallels to Stephen King's The Dark Half, but takes things in a totally different direction. Every year on his birthday, Ned Dunstan has suffered strange fits in which he sees violent acts through another's eyes. Now, Ned has returned to his hometown, where his mother lies dying, and his strange birthright is about to become evident...