Today and tomorrow we’re traveling backwards in time, taking a look at books from the Leisure Horror Book Club.
Today we’ll look at the first Leisure Horror Book Club selection for April, Creatures of the Pool by Ramsey Campbell. Tomorrow we’ll tackle Dweller by Jeff Strand.
So . . . what came in the mail for me in April?
Remember, if you are interested in this book, click the mouse on the book cover or the colorful icons below the summary to order it from an online bookseller through an affiliate link.
![]() |
Creatures of the PoolAuthor: Campbell, Ramsey |
||||
|
Gavin Meadows always worried about his father. The old man could appear a bit paranoid at times, and his research projects sometimes seemed a little crazy. But now his father’s missing, and Gavin is more than worried. And the more he looks into his father’s research, the more frightened he becomes. This time his father might have really been on to something. Something truly terrifying. For the more Gavin learns of the secrets hidden beneath the city for centuries, the more he realizes the people he sees on the street every day may not be people after all. |
|||||
|
|||||
Ramsey Campbell’s Creatures of the Pool was originally published in a special signed limited slipcase hardcover edition, a hardcover edition and a trade paperback edition from PS Publishing in Britain. These editions are still available as you can see below.
![]() |
Creatures of the PoolAuthor: Campbell, Ramsey |
||||
|
The calls on the radio are all about tunnels. Someone whose grandfather was involved in digging the first of the pair that take roads under the river says attempts were made to block up the excavations. The bosses accused the workmen of trying to prolong the job, but some of her grandfather’s colleagues insisted the tunnel had been blocked from within. The wife of a worker at the sorting office on Copperas Hill reveals that the postmen are loath to use the tunnel that links the office to Lime Street Station. Perhaps it’s a tale to frighten new recruits, since the veterans say the lights in the tunnel sometimes fail, unless they’re switched off as a prank, at which point you may realize you have company that doesn’t need to see you to find you, because you’ll hear its whisper in your ear before you encounter its wet flabby touch. The construction of the offices unearthed coffins lined with lead. A ticket collector rings to talk about the underground railway, a loop of which passes beneath the centre of Liverpool, starting and returning at the bottom of the street the castle used to dominate. All the tunnels leak, and the loop has to be closed every spring while rails corroded by salt water are replaced. The employee says he’s been told by contractors that they’ve heard intruders running or rather sloshing ahead of them in the dark, even in sections of the tunnels where there’s no water underfoot . . . Gavin Meadows gives guided tours of Liverpool. Some of his stories are based on history and some on local legends. As a summer of rainstorms and redevelopment overtakes the city, his research starts to disinter the true nature of the place. What originally brought settlers to the Pool? What used to take place in the cellars of Liverpool’s Whitechapel? Why did Joseph Williamson, the Mole of Edge Hill, construct a maze of underground tunnels only to brick them up? What drove Virginia Woolf’s uncle mad in Liverpool as he summed up a prosecution for murder? As Gavin and his partner Lucinda delve deeper they’re confronted by the truth behind the legends and encounter what has always lived under the city. At the end, what will come up from the dark? |
|||||
|
|||||
Website:
Ramsey Campbell has a website called Ramsey Campbell which contains a lot of information about the writer and his work as well as interviews, reviews, FAQ and message boards.
BookBrowse Reader:
If you’d like to check out the first bit of Creatures of the Pool, try this book browser app. and read up to page 39.
- April 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Creatures of the Pool
- April 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Dweller
- May 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: The Bridge
- May 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Sparrow Rock
- June 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Night Souls
- June 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Joyride
- July 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: The Killing Kind
- July 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Wolf’s Bluff
- August 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Siren
- August 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: A Gathering of Crows
- September 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: Audrey’s Door
- September 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: The Blood Artists
- October 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: The Damnation Game
- October 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club: The Disappearance
- November 2010 Leisure Horror Book Club

March 2010 (Mass Market Paperback — Leisure Books)
March 2010 (Mass Market Paperback — Leisure Books)
November 2009 (Signed Ltd. Slipcase Hardcover– PS Publishing)


Comments on this entry are closed.