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Los elementales

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Después de un extraño incidente en el funeral de la matriarca Marian, las familias McCray y Savage esperan un tranquilo verano en la costa del golfo de Alabama, donde tres antiguas casas victorianas se elevan en la soledad de una playa abrasadora. Dos de las casas son habitables, mientras que la tercera está siendo invadida por la arena: entre sus paredes, algo desconocido se encuentra al acecho. Algo que ha atemorizado a varios miembros de la familia y que aún los persigue en pesadillas. Algo atroz que parece listo para atacar de nuevo�

Consagrado por sus guiones para Tim Burton, Beetlejuice y El extraño mundo de Jack, Michael McDowell ha sido hoy redescubierto: la exhibición de sus linajes literarios lo sitúan, junto a Flannery O’Connor, Carson McCullers y Tennessee Williams, como una de las más eminentes voces del gótico sureño. Los Elementales, novela de culto en los Estados Unidos, amalgama de un modo magistral una sólida construcción de los personajes (entre los cuales, el clima y el paisaje de Beldame son grandes protagonistas), un portentoso registro de la ironía y una trama inolvidable. Pero lo verdaderamente milagroso, aquello indecible, resulta ser el estilo. McDowell demuestra un talento sobrenatural para los diálogos; su imaginación vertiginosa aparece sabiamente balanceada por una metódica y paciente artesanía narrativa.

Admirada como joya del terror, Los Elementales es también considerada una obra maestra en la tradición de las novelas de casas encantadas, y un prodigio de la literatura gótica. Un triple tesoro que la vuelve deslumbrante.

312 pages, Perfect Paperback

First published October 1, 1981

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About the author

Michael McDowell

72books1,827followers
Michael McDowell is a prolific horror writer who has distinguished himself with a varied body of work within the genre. He was born in Enterprise, Alabama, in 1950 and died of AIDS-related illness in Boston, Massachusetts, in 1999.

His first horror novel, The Amulet, relates the tragedies that befall various individuals who come in possession of a supernatural pendant in a small town.

In McDowell's second novel, Cold Moon Over Babylon, a murdered woman's corpse is dispatched into a river, but her spirit roams the land, and in the evening hours it seeks revenge on her killer even as he plots the demise of her surviving relatives.

Don D'Ammassa, writing in the St. James Guide to Horror, Ghost & Gothic Writers, noted that McDowell's ability to maintain a sense of mundane normalcy against supernatural activity provides the novel with "a fine balance between reality and unreality," and he called Cold Moon Over Babylon "one of the best ghost stories ever written at novel length."

A similarly disturbing tension between dull reality and the supernatural is produced in The Elementals, wherein a host of visitors come to stay at a secluded house occupied by embodiments of elemental forces.

McDowell's Katie, meanwhile, concerns a clairvoyant serial killer whose powers of perception enable her to evade her trackers. The attractive but deranged heroine of this novel manages to conduct her murderous activities despite the awareness of her parents, who are content to derive financial gain from their daughter's crimes.

Madness is central to McDowell's Toplin, which details the vile imaginings of a man who suffers from mental illness but nonetheless determines to conduct himself within society. D'Ammassa praised Toplin as "perhaps the best novel ever written from the point of view of a schizophrenic."

Among McDowell's other writings is the six-part serial novel Blackwater, a chronicle of a southern family drawn to the supernatural. In addition, McDowell has also supplied the screenplays for various films, including director Tim Burton's horror comedy Beetlejuice and his animated production The Nightmare Before Christmas.

Stephen King called McDowell one of the "finest writers of paperback originals in America today." Tabitha King was asked to complete McDowell's unfinished novel Candles Burning, which was published in 2006 to good reviews. Concerning his career, McDowell never tried to be something he wasn't. "I am a commercial writer and I'm proud of that", he said in the book Faces of Fear in 1985. "I am writing things to be put in the bookstore next month. I think it is a mistake to try to write for the ages."

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 2,963 reviews
Profile Image for Zain.
1,826 reviews251 followers
September 22, 2024
A+ For Dialogue and Scariness! 😱

I have never once, until now, read a book so scary, that has also had me laughing so hard.

Have you ever read a book that’s given you both, joy and nightmares in the same chapter? Well, I have now.

This gothic horror has some interesting writing, some of the greatest dialogue that I have ever read (think Shakespeare).

The cleverness in describing characters by the author, the cleverness of the characters describing other characters is just precious (the perfect word).

And the horror! Oh, the horror of this book! Too scary for description. Just hilarious and horrific and scary and suspenseful and sad and glad are feelings that the book gives you�

The Elementals get fundamentally…five stars. ✨✨✨✨�
Profile Image for Char.
1,889 reviews1,812 followers
October 31, 2022
This book was a total pleasure, from start to finish. To enhance that pleasure, I read it with a group of horror lovers over at ŷ and we had a ball!

Written back in the 80's a lot of my fellow book loving friends have recommended THE ELEMENTALS to me over the last few years. Problem was it was out of print and I couldn't even find 1 copy of anything he's written in the various used book stores in which I shop. Then, Valancourt Books came to the rescue! Valancourt is dedicated to bringing back some of these out of print books and it's impossible for me to say how on board with that I am.

Anyway, this book ROCKED. A southern family vacations at their family's spit of land in southern Alabama, which they call Beldame. There are three houses, but only two families. Something is wrong with that third house and they all feel it.

The characters are crazy and memorable. Big Barbara-southern matriarch and drunk. India-a young girl from NYC trying to reconcile herself to a beach home in the south. Her father, Luker, with whom she has a very strange relationship. These are just a few of the fascinating characters that Mr. McDowell brings alive. He also brings Beldame alive with his descriptions of life on the gulf, the sweltering heat, the shifting dunes. I felt like I was there.

Another thing that I, (and a few others reading the book with me), enjoyed was the way the author would write a smooth paragraph where everything is cool and then WHAM: one chilling sentence that rocked the world of the reader. Over and over this technique was employed and I loved it. I truly loved it.

That's all I'm going to say about the plot. This book comes with an intro from Michael Rowe, author of the most the great book, Enter, Night. I avoided reading the intro until I had finished the book, because sometimes the intro gives a lot away. There is also a small section about the author in which I discovered that Michael McDowell helped to write the screenplay for Beetlejuice. That didn't surprise me because the characters in this book came alive to me just like the characters in Beetlejuice did.

This is a most excellent example of atmospheric, literary 80's horror and I cannot recommend it enough. I originally gave this 4 stars, but after thinking about it overnight, I cannot think of one thing that the author could have done better. So five stars it is for THE ELEMENTALS. Read it!
Profile Image for mark monday.
1,839 reviews6,068 followers
June 7, 2012
here's a rant:

the constant marginalization of horror really pisses me off. this is, after all, a genre that includes works by Edgar Allan Poe, Henry James, Ambrose Bierce, Ray Bradbury, Shirley Jackson, Joyce Carol Oates, Justin Cronin... so many classic and modern luminaries. it includes modern unknowns like Thomas Ligotti, who can out-write 9 authors out of 10, and dazzling semi-unknowns like Robert Aickman, whose prose can be compared favorably to best of Beattie or Byatt or Boyle. and yet it remains the most ghettoized and often despised of classic genres: many bookstores don't even include horror sections, and when they do, it is wall-to-wall King and Koontz; even ŷ didn't bother including horror as a genre within in its annual reader's poll on best books of 2010. why is this marginalization constantly the case? is it due to the reactionary themes within an art form (literature) that is often seen as liberal and humanist in outlook? is it due to the frequently lurid and corny paperback covers and the often explicitly graphic content within, or the at-times gibbering, gore-obsessed nature of horror fan dialogue?

perhaps the underlying reason is that the mining and unearthing of anxieties and fears is by its very nature an activity that the world holds at a distinct remove. horror is the Sin-Eater of literature; if every Great Novel is a golden road that leads the reader on journeys of learning and experience, then horror novels are those places outside that path, within the earth beneath it, the dark foundation and all those pathless places, the dirt & the debris & the many-legged crawling things, the areas that live without markers and guideposts yet surround us still. simply put, horror is endemic to the human experience. it deserves respect.

so what does this have to do with The Elementals? a lot, and i suppose not a lot. the novel is slight and sensitive; without its horrors, it would be considered a bent and bizarrely charming thing, an honest and often grotesque depiction of Southern manners and society, a worthy offshoot of Flannery O'Connor. the story of a brave little girl and her perhaps-unusual family, and their misadventures. the author illustrates a certain place with a deft and subtle hand, free of fuss and bustle, full of surprising incident and quirky characterization and odd ambiguity. however the addition of horror moves the novel beyond a gentle but pointed comedy of manners and into something stranger and more threatening, a place where questions go unanswered, attacks go unexplained, characters both just and unjust find themselves at odds with nature and the unnatural, a place where the horrors literally rise from the earth and sand, to tempt and threaten and destroy, and then to return back to the earth, their motives unexplained. this is in some ways the essence of horror: the tableau of humanity, threatened and tormented by things that spurn our paths, that exist beyond our understanding. the horror may come from within or without, but it lives beside us always, an inconstant and alien reminder of how easily our cozy realities may be threatened and transformed, taken off of the paths that we so carefully construct and cherish. yeah, Horror!
Profile Image for Justin Tate.
Author7 books1,353 followers
November 21, 2020
Horror virtuoso Michael McDowell discards the gloomy norms of haunted house literature and sets this masterpiece along sandy shores of the sunny Gulf Coast. With sparkling waves at their doorstep and tanning oil on their pale skin, an exceedingly wealthy southern family relax in isolation at their Victorian beach houses over the summer. The respite is much-needed after the death–and bizarre funeral—of a detestable family matriarch.

One of the vacant beach houses is infested with a nasty spirit. Something that’s not quite ghost, not quite monster, but capable of physical manifestation and elemental manipulation. The family had suspicions about the house for years. Rather than do anything about it, however, they’ve elected to let it become overtaken by sand dunes and fall into ruin. Until this year, that is, when thirteen-year-old India is unable to resist her curiosity.

It’s a testament to McDowell’s talent that the supernatural creature is not even the most bizarre thing about this plot. As an Alabama native himself, it’s clear his authorial eye has always been intrigued by the incestuous culture of wealthy southern families. This theme is explored at great depth in his 1,000+ page epic Blackwater (1983), but this short novel has plenty to say as well.

Many of the best moments include no horror at all, but are mere depictions of this family living their unusual lives. The funeral scene should be considered for the greatest opening chapter of all time, and everything that follows maintains that bizarre energy.

The father-daughter relationship of Luker and India is relentlessly fascinating. She’s a mature thirteen years and flirty toward her father, who’s flirty back. It’s certainly weird, but McDowell doesn’t seem to be suggesting that there’s outright abuse going on. Yes, the father likes taking semi-inappropriate photographs of her and has no problem giving her alcohol, but she’s fully in control and their relationship is meant to be seen, I think, as a minor escalation from what is “normal� southern behavior. Luker’s own mother, for example, gives her grown son long, semi-erotic foot rubs in front of the entire family and no one bats an eye.

Whatever message McDowell might be trying to convey, there’s no question that it works from a literary perspective. The pacing needs intriguing characterization to ground us in reality before we can experience supernatural horror. My favorite McDowell quote is when he said that horror writing requires “taking the improbable, the unimaginable, and the impossible, and making it seem not only possible—but inevitable.�

Indeed, when the horror elements do kick in, the world is so established, so immersive, that there’s nothing the monster can do that’s too scary to imagine. And McDowell makes it damn scary. The Elementals is easily one of the scariest novels I’ve ever read. Scary enough to ruin beach houses for the rest of your life and to make you shiver every time you see a grain of sand.

But the scariest thing is that, were it not for small press Valancourt Books, almost all of Michael McDowell’s novels would be out-of-print and possibly forgotten. That includes The Elementals, but also Blackwater, Gilded Needles and The Amulet. All of which deserve classic, required-reading status for horror fans. Thanks to these recent re-prints, his books are finding new audiences and getting the respect they deserve. I found The Elementals on the required reading list for a master’s course on “Modern Gothic� literature.

It’s a shame that McDowell is no longer with us to celebrate his revival. I’d like to ask him what he thinks about it. He’s quoted to say that the best thing a writer can do is write for now, not for the ages. For a while his novels seemed to be just that—fad stories for a booming �80s horror market. Now that these novels are being dusted off, however, I think we’ll be reading him for a long, long time to come.

MORE ON THE AUTHOR:

Even among the horror community, Michael McDowell is not well-known. I’ve talked to many who’ve never heard of him, let alone read one of his novels. My hunch is that his books came out amid a sea of horror publications in the 1980’s and, without any movie adaptations, his name never could rise to the surface. This isn’t to say he wasn’t successful or didn’t have a fandom, of course, but it allowed for his bibliography to disappear over time. What everyone does know, however, is Beetlejuice and The Nightmare Before Christmas. McDowell was involved with the screenplays for both of these iconic films. In fact, the project he was working on before he died of AIDS complications, was a sequel to Beetlejuice. If you like memorable characters, gothic environs, a sense of humor and big scares, read everything you can by Michael McDowell.

Note: This review was originally published by .

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Profile Image for Tim.
490 reviews800 followers
August 28, 2021


In the state of Alabama sits three houses. They have a lovely view, one can walk along the sand and dip their toes in the cool water. Two families come to this little slice of paradise called Beldame, the Savages and the McCrays, who've been escaping to this lovely place whenever life gets rough. For some reason no one they've taken outside of their families seems to like the place, but they love it. After the funeral for one the Savages, the two families reunite and visit this lovely place; a place where they seem to repress the unpleasant events that happened there, like that time the hired help's daughter drowned there, or the time one of them visited the third house� the house that seems to be filling with sand.

Why did no one tell me about Michael McDowell? I mean, yes, I've heard of him in some horror circles as an underrated author, but why did no one tell me that his work was THIS good? I'll be blunt; I think this is one of the best horror novels to come out of the 80s� no, I'll go ahead and say it, I think this is my favorite horror novel to come out of the 80s. This is so good I don't even really know how to review it.

Let's get this out of the way; this book is genuinely unnerving. I love the genre, but I can't personally say that about too many horror novels. This book is unsettling. The idea of the title creatures� spirits� things� whatever they are, is unnerving because we never quite understand them. They seem to break rules that we think they are supposed to follow, and part of the brilliant aspect of this book is that it doesn't feel like the author is cheating with this. This is something completely unknowable and any rules it plays by are its own.

This book is filled with so much mystery, so many things that are not quite explained, but never feel as if they need to be. Much of it I wouldn't want to be explained. The mystery adds to it. It makes sense in its own weird way and I can't imagine that it would be improved with the blanks filled in.

I've rarely read a book I enjoyed this much from start to finish. It managed to be funny at times, terrifying at other and for much of it, such a well told southern gothic that I forgot about the horror aspects, just engrossed in the dynamics of these two families. When the horror crept back in, it was a welcome and terrifying surprise. A rare 5/5 stars.
Profile Image for Chrissy.
153 reviews253 followers
November 2, 2023
The Elementals is a southern gothic horror, which slowly builds with atmospheric descriptions of family dynamics, heat, sand and isolation. The horror takes a long time to get to, but when it does, it's worth the wait!
Profile Image for Ginger.
933 reviews535 followers
April 18, 2021
I really loved this one after all!

My Kindle book of The Elementals starts off with a prologue from Michael Rowe.
I was a bit paranoid of spoilers so I decided to read it AFTER I finished the book and I agree with all he said on descriptions.

One thing that he said in the prologue was the character of India McCray was Lydia Deetz from Beetlejuice and Odessa Red was Van Helsing.
He could not be more on point in this similarity! 🤣😂

The Elementals is a Southern gothic horror book that starts off slow and builds to an epic ending of death, destruction and secrets being revealed.

The location of the three occupied houses at Beldame is a unique setting for a gothic book.
The Victorian mansions are wonderfully described and the Alabama sun/setting is so much of a character in this book.

And speaking of characters...

The characters in the book are so bizarre and just not quite right (which is perfect in my opinion for a horror book!).
The McCrays and the Savages are two weird ass families.
Did the urban myths and customs of the Savage family make them all like this or do we blame the hot, brutal sun for their eccentric ways?!

The parent/child relationships in the book are also uneasy and strange.
It’s a nice touch because you’re not quite sure what is going on while reading all of the interactions between both families.

And the sand!!
Who knew sand could be so frightening and creepy?!
The descriptions of the horror elements in this book are also fantastic!
I could visually see all of the odd and scary things that McDowell writes about.

Definitely recommend this one if you love gothic books and also locations set in the Deep South.
Profile Image for Beverly.
946 reviews429 followers
November 20, 2020
So truly wonderful and scary on many levels, The Elementals, is one of my favorite reads this year. What does it touch on? To name a few things it gets perfect are: a blunt, honest and loving relationship between a teenage daughter and her dad, southern mores and speech patterns done right, family dynamics, hot weather, and one mind-numbingly disturbing, malevolent house.

Beldame is the isolated retreat of the Savages and the McCrays. It consists of three, that's right three Victorian mansions set next to the Alabama gulf, far away from everything. Marian Savage, the cruel, cold matriarch of the family has just passed and the families go to Beldame for the summer. The Savages still own one house and the McCrays, connected by friendship and family ties to the Savages, owns another. House Three is abandoned and has been inundated by sand which has broken into the house and almost covered it on one side.

Written in 1981, The Elementals has as its main characters a thirteen year old girl raised in New York by her Alabama raised dad, and a middle-aged black woman who is the maid of the Savages and also their friend. India, the girl, and Odessa are not friends at first, but become linked by a sensitivity to the evil in the third house and fight to keep their loved ones safe.

The portrayal of the girl is particularly good. She speaks her mind, without being a brat. She and her father cuss like sailors which her southern grandmother decries. India and Odessa are magnificent creations. The conversations that India has with her father are brilliant. On meeting her runaway mother on a New York street, Luker, the dad, yells, F... Off, B...ch! I love it. Anyway, this is scary and well written and I can't wait to read more from this author, who, left us early because of AIDS, that scourge of my youth, which still has no vaccine.
Profile Image for Fernando.
718 reviews1,065 followers
October 6, 2020
Lo que hay en esa casa, niña, sabe más que tú. Lo que hay en esa casa no surge de tu mente. No obedece a las reglas y se comporta como debe comportarse un espíritu. Hace lo que hace para engañarte, quiere inducirte a creer cosas que no son. No posee ni una pizca de verdad. Lo que hizo la semana pasada, no volverá a hacerlo hoy. Ves algo allá adentro, y es algo que no estaba ayer y que no estará mañana.

Cuando muchos lectores hablan tan bien de una novela, cuando todos dicen lo atrapante que es, decididamente voy a una librería y la compro. Esto es lo que hice con esta magnífica novela de Michael McDowell y no me equivoqué.
Verdaderamente está escrita en forma soberbia y el poder de adicción y compenetración que genera es total.
Michael McDowell, quien escribiera el guión de la ya mítica animación “El extraño mundo de Jack� y de la película Beetlejuice, ambas de Tim Burton, hizo también una gran carrera literaria que le valió menciones y reconocimientos, y previa a esta, escribió otra novela muy buena llamada “El amuleto�, que pienso buscar para leer algún día.
La historia de “Los elementales� se centra en una apartada localidad del sur de los Estados Unidos, llamada Beldame, en donde los miembros de dos familias, los McCray y los Savage deciden ir a descansar luego de la muerte y del extraño funeral de la matriarca de los Savage, Marian, madre de Dauphin, suegra de Leigh, consuegra de Big Barbara Ann, quien es la madre de Luker y a su vez este es el padre de India, una chica de trece años un tanto especial para su edad. En ese velatorio sucede algo perturbador que tiene que ver con lo que se desarrollará más adelante.
Los acompaña su sirviente negra, llamada Odessa. Típica empleada de color de los estados sureñas del país, de esas que conviven con la familia durante décadas.
Hay tres casas en Beldame, construidas exactamente con la misma arquitectura de estilo victoriana, aunque “la tercera casa� está abandonada. Las dunas avanzaron para apropiarse de ella y nadie vive allí. Al menos eso es lo que todos creen.
Pero algo maligno acecha en esa casa. Algo ominoso, terrorífico, con entidad propia, que comenzará a atormentar a las seis personas que viven en las otras dos y además de estas entidades que con el correr de la lectura se transformarán opresivas y torturantes para los personajes, encontraremos otros dos personajes claves en esta historia.
En primer lugar, el calor. Insoportable, agobiante, abrasador. Capaz de generar las más variadas alucinaciones en los moradores de esas casas y todo ello derivará en obsesiones y visiones aterrorizantes cada vez que se acerquen a esa tercera casa.
El otro personaje es la arena. El autor, utiliza el recurso de la arena como la sangre en las novelas de vampiros y ésta se convierte en el eje de todo el mal que envenena el ambiente.
Prontamente, comenzarán a suceder cosas verdaderamente extrañas y toda la acción se centrará en dos personajes claves: por un lado en la hija de Luker, India, quien entablará una peculiar relación con la otra pieza fundamental de todo esto, que es Odessa, la sirviente.
Entre las dos, descubrirán que todo el terror que yace en la tercera casa y lo que se desencadenará en la tercera parte del libro será enloquecedor.
Criaturas horripilantes, apariciones fantasmales, escenas inverosímiles y repugnantes comenzarán a suceder una tras otra y es aquí en donde recrudece todo el terror que asalta tanto a los personajes como al lector.
Leyendo acerca del autor, me informo de que escribe “terror gótico sureño�. Realmente a mí no me importan ese tipo de clasificaciones. Esto es terror y del bueno.
McDowell juega con la sugestión del lector y logra que este vea lo mismo que los personajes. Las extrañas criaturas que pululan en esa casa, son descriptas con tanta nitidez que uno se asusta y esto hace que la adrenalina suba y nos exija leer más y más�
Esta novela fue escrita por McDowell en 1981 pero por suerte, existe en Argentina una editorial excelente y maravillosa, que se llama La Bestia Equilátera. Yo ya poseo otras dos novelas tan desconocidas como únicas y que solo esta editorial podía publicar.
Una es “El caballero de cayó al mar� del desconocido H. C. Lewis y “El otro lado�, escrita por un extraño ilustrador del siglo XIX, que era amigo personal de Franz Kafka y que se llamaba Alfred Kubin.
La Bestia Equilátera tiene esta sana costumbre. Todo lo que edita es original, desconocido y de una gran calidad.
Volviendo a “Los elementales�, (tuve que esperar a leer más de doscientas páginas para entender por qué se llamaba así), no tengo más que palabras de admiración porque he pasado ratos de altas dosis de atención, susto y entretenimiento.
McDowell escribe tremendamente bien y como comenté previamente, sabe cómo jugar con el inconsciente del lector.
Hacía mucho que no leía una novela de terror. La última fue “Christine� de Stephen King, que era un gran amigo del autor, y recuerdo que era adolescente cuando la leí y se me había generado cierta aversión a pasar por delante de la trompa de los autos cuando caminaba por la calle.
Espero no tener que ira a ninguna mansión antigua para no recordar lo que sucede en la ominosa tercera casa de Beldame, en donde los Elementales acechan para enloquecer, aterrar y matar.
Y alentado por la lectura de esta novela, voy a ir un paso más allá, comenzando a leer otra escalofriante y aterradora novela, ya mítica: la que escribió William Peter Blatty y que se llamó “El exorcista�.
Profile Image for Misty Marie Harms.
559 reviews682 followers
March 10, 2022
If it takes 62% to finally get something happening in a book, you are getting 3 stars or less. I love the characters and the scenic backdrop but my lord how long can you discuss people on vacation at the beach with a creepy house next door. I started getting bored around 40%.

Pros - Creepy house of sand.
Relatable characters.
I finished it.

Cons - Nothing really happens until the end of the book.
Bunch of filler content that is tedious.
Profile Image for Dave Edmunds.
334 reviews217 followers
November 7, 2022


"Savage mothers eat their children up!�

4.75 �'s

Initial Thoughts

I first heard of Michael McDowell almost three years ago, when I started reading Stephen King, and began looking for similar authors. McDowell's 1981 novel The Elementals featured prominently on a number of lists amongst the greatest horrors of all time. It really has been on my TBR that long.

What I already knew about this author going in to this book was that he was a successful screenwriter, being the man behind both Beetlejuice and that awesome Christmas/Halloween animation The Nightmare Before Christmas. He was good friends with Stephen King, with his wife Tabitha King actually finishing McDowell's final novel. Sadly, that came about as he tragically passed away at the age of 49 in 1999.

McDowell was also highly regarded by another of my favourite authors Peter Straub who described the man as: "one of the best writers of horror in this or any other country.� Pete's words are good enough for me and although I had planned on waiting till I had time to blast through this author's entire body of work I felt this one was well overdue and really no time like the present.

"“Spirits living in hell don’t feel the heat. It’s spirits living in hell that causes heat like this, that’s what it is. Cain’t you feel ’em, child?�

The Story

The story opens in fantastic fashion with the most bizarre funeral in the history of funerals, which really sets the tone for what's to come. I won't say exactly why it's so strange, I'll let you find that out for yourself. But it's a very private affair, for good reason, and features the Savage and McCray families that this tale centres around.

After laying to rest the beloved former matriarch of the family, Marian Savage, the family heads to the Gulf coast of Alabama and the beloved family retreat of Beldame as a way of dealing and coming to terms with the grief. Nice when you're a family of millionaires and have that luxury!

The refuge itself is extremely remote being completely cut off from civilisation when the tide rolls in and consists of three large Victorian style houses. One belongs to the Savages, one to the McCrays and the "Third House" has been abandoned as it is slowly being buried beneath a large sand dune. It has an air of mystery surrounding it and it isn't long before the youngest member of the group, India, takes a keen interest in it and ventures over to take a few photos.

And this is when the story really begins.



The Writing

Straight to the point...i loved McDowell's writing. When compared to the modern state of the horror genre he's much more subtle, taking his time to build suspense, tension and atmosphere. His prose really have a seductive quality. Damn straight, he is sexy with the words and really draws you in and wraps you up in his masterfully woven narrative. There's nothing remotely sleazy about it, unlike myself.

Is this a slow-burn kind of novel? You bet your ass it is! But the story flows and I never got bored. And when this one gets going McDowell cranks it up to the max with some fantastic horror scenes. Still if you hate books that take there time with the set up it might not be for you. For me personally, it was perfect.

Michael Rowe, who wrote Enter Night, gave an introduction in my copy and he talks about how above anything McDowell is a master of place. He is absolutely on the money there. The way he paints southern Alabama is quite literally a work of art. You can feel the heat and taste the atmosphere as the sun blazes down on you. Honestly, I feel like I've been there myself after finishing.

Once I'd arrived in Beldame I couldn't help but feel the sense of isolation in this tropical paradise. This really added to the mounting sense of dread that builds throughout under the watchful eye of the "Third House" and the blazing sun. I think I felt it more than the characters. Superbly done!

"It’s funny you should call it the third house, because that’s what we always called it. It used to scare me, and Leigh too. That’s why my bedroom is where it is—because from there, you can’t see the third house. I was scared to get up at night and look at it, I was scared there was something that lived inside it.�

The Characters

Along with the location the characters in The Elementals really stood out. All of them are really interesting and full of depth. The Savages and McCrays being the perfect example of a dysfunctional family and they feel very alive, each with their own unique quirks and habits. Despite being a weird bunch, I found each individual pretty likeable which must say something about me. Each has their own wonderful little life that's woven into this tale.

A big part of bringing his characters to life is the dialogue and McDowell has a wonderful ear for it. I guess you need that being a screenwriter. The way he changes certain words to emphasise the character's accent was excellent and really brought a southern flavour to proceedings. Y'all should check it out.

The standout characters for me were Luker McCray and his daughter, India. There relationship was pretty bizarre at times in the way he allowed her to drink alcohol and swear in front of him, as well as openly discuss his sex life. As a father of a daughter I did find it a bit cringe worthy. But there was an honesty and openness that they shared with a real sense of equality that I found refreshing. India was treated as an adult and was never afraid to share her thoughts and feelings with her father. It was a fascinating relationship.

While reading the book my ŷ buddy Corey Woodcock pointed out that two of the characters in the story were prototypes for ones used in Beetlejuice. Well I don't know who the other one is, but India is definitely Lydia from that movie who was memorably played by Winona Ryder. Once I had that in my head I couldn't get it out.



Final Thoughts

You'll have already guessed that I absolutely loved The Elementals. It's a haunted house story unlike no other. A really refreshing and interesting take. I haven't even mentioned the supernatural elements in this one and that's due to all the drama packed in. But when the scary stuff comes it definitely has some original elements that you'll lap up.

McDowell has a reputation as the King of Southern Gothic fiction and I can see why. This is a remarkable example that I won't hesitate to recommend. I'd even go so far as to say it's essential horror reading. As long as you're not one of those splatterpunk fanatics who demands someone getting wasted every other page. In that case stick to reading Richard Laymon.

But the beauty of this story is that it does get very crazy very fast towards the end with a terrifying finish. There's some brilliant imagery that'll stay long in my memory. In fact I couldn't help but think what a great movie this would make with someone like Guillermo del Toro at the helm. So make it happen!

And on that thought I'll draw a close to this review. Thanks for reading...cheers!


Michael McDowell
Profile Image for Fabian.
995 reviews2,043 followers
September 10, 2020
Always present in my mind is the notion that the 80s comedy Beetlejuice must get a sequel. (Alas, a Broadway musical will suffice.) That film molded my nerdy self into the literophile we have today: Oh what a marvelous imagination behind one of the funniest and most creative screenplays of all time!

& then to realize that the writer of said masterpiece also wrote horror novels! Horror novels of the best quality! And there is plenty to admire in "The Elementals," a story that has accumulated dust in more ways than one! (Inside joke.) We visit the terrain of those gigantic sandworms that terrified our imaginations--even in Beetlejuice: the animated series. & Lydia Deetz, quintessential goth girl, is revamped as imp India, also a precocious teen that sees what's beyond.

But this is nothing nearly as terrifying as Clive Barker's (also-80s) brand of horror. Or Stephen Kings. It is absolutely inventive, and, even better, hella funny at times.
Profile Image for Kimberly.
1,898 reviews2 followers
April 14, 2018
SOLID 5 STARS!

Honestly, I think I'd have a difficult time finding a better example of a "quiet horror" book that delivers genuine chills! The southern atmosphere and isolation of the vacation houses of the two main families couldn't have been in a better location. With nothing except the shifting sands and surf for company, the scene here was set perfectly for a horror so unsettling, that even I couldn't predict what would happen next!

If you're looking for a gore/torture fest, you won't find it in these pages. What you will find is a creeping horror that inexplicably grabs ahold of your imagination from the very beginning. There are no "definite" answers here, either....which is something that actually ADDS to the fear factor tremendously. This is one story that I can see re-reading every few years, just to bring back that sense of utter foreboding that I got from it.

Highly recommended to fans of "quiet horror"!

*Re-read April 2016--If possible, I enjoyed the second read of this even more than the first! Not only will this book remain on my "Favorites" shelf, but it ranks in the top ten books I've read so far, period. The atmosphere--unspoiled by "knowing too much" reminded me much of the feeling I get when reading Algernon Blackwood's "The Willows". This is a perfect example of horror at its best, in my opinion.*

**Re-read April 2018--Obviously one of my favorite books, EVER! I still feel this is atmospheric horror, at its absolute best. **
Profile Image for Dan Schwent.
3,176 reviews10.8k followers
July 9, 2018
When Marian Savage dies, her son and his family head south to Beldame to recover in beach houses that have been in the family for generations. The family splits and takes two of the beach houses. The third house stays vacant, for an ancient evil lurks within...

I read earlier this year and loved it. Michael McDowell has been on my radar ever since. When my cohort Anthony offered to loan it to me, I jumped on it.

I have to think The Elementals is a trial run for some concepts Michael McDowell would later explore at great length in Blackwater, namely a Southern family saga with supernatural elements lurking on the fringes.

The Savages and McCrays have been coming to Beldame for years but have always avoided the mysterious third house. After the death of the Savage matriarch, they head down to Beldame for some r&r. It's India McCray's first visit to Beldame so naturally she's very curious about the third house. It's sounds like it's going to be creepy from the beginning but it's not. Michael McDowell takes his time, develops the Savages and McCrays into characters you can't help but be interested it. Then he torments the poor bastards.

For the most part the story revolves around India McCray and Odessa, the Savage's maid. Odessa knows a lot mroe than she's letting on and India is a teenage busybody with nothing but time on her hands at the sleepy penisula. I have to say that Luker and India are my favorite father-daughter combo in all of fiction with their interesting dynamic. Apart, they're both fascinating but together, they're something else. Lawton's machinations made me hate him more than I feared the evils of the third house. Big Barabara's alcohol problem and relationship to Lawton was sad but I wound up liking her quite a bit.

In addiition to family drama, McDowell paints a very accurate picture of the torturous, oppressive heat and humidy of the south. I broke a sweat while I was reading some of the later chapters. The creepy happenings start at Marian Savage's funeral and gradually grow from there. By the end, it's hard to tell who is going to survive.

Much with Blackwater, I would have read twice as many pages featuring the Savages and McCrays. I enjoyed the characters so much that the horror element could be removed and it would still be an enjoyable book. Four out of five stars.
Profile Image for Jonathan Janz.
Author57 books1,963 followers
October 8, 2015
If Tennessee Williams wrote a supernatural horror novel, it would read like THE ELEMENTALS.

This statement isn't completely true, of course; Michael McDowell was a fiercely unique author who wrote unlike any other. But some of the most fascinating aspects of Tennessee Williams's plays are exhibited in this novel: atypical/dysfunctional familial relationships; unpleasant truths suppressed or left unspoken; horror-through-acquiescence; moments of shocking violence; manipulative, vicious matriarchs and patriarchs; and a seething, suffocating atmosphere (both thermally and emotionally).

The dialogue, especially, reminds me of Williams. Hearing McDowell's Luker talk to his mother Big Barbara reminded me powerfully of Brick's frustrating conversations with Big Daddy in CAT ON A HOT TIN ROOF. In one of Williams's darkest plays--SUDDENLY, LAST SUMMER--there are moments that remind me a great deal of McDowell's simmering novel.

I guess I should mention that I love the plays of Tennessee Williams.

And man, did I love THE ELEMENTALS.

I read Michael McDowell back in my early twenties, and though I enjoyed COLD MOON OVER BABYLON and loved THE AMULET, I suspect I wasn't seasoned enough yet as a reader to fully grasp what McDowell was doing. In THE ELEMENTALS, he immerses us completely in a world familiar-yet-alien, and in doing so he creates one of the best settings in horror fiction.

Beldame.

The trio of houses, the sifting white sands, the brackish lagoon, and the interminable Gulf comprise a living, breathing, *sentient* character, one so seductive and malefic that I found myself tightening whenever India (13) and her elder family members arrived there. I feared for them, found myself yearning for them to Just. Get. Out. And trembled with dread each time they ventured nearer the Third House.

Ah, the Third House.

It takes a lot to scare me. I read widely, but I read more horror than anything else. So while a story can still thrill me, move me, or entertain me, it's a rare tale that can frighten me.

THE ELEMENTALS did.

There are scenes involving the Third House that had me checking under the bed for misshapen creatures, that had me triple-checking the locks of our house to make sure something...unnatural didn't invade. Though you could often criticize these characters for their decisions and shake your head in frustration at their insistence on returning to the Third House, McDowell's writing is expert enough--and vivid enough--to convince you to dismiss your inner critic and just suffer with the characters as they encounter one horror after another.

Read THE ELEMENTALS. Valancourt Books, one of my favorite publishers, has given McDowell's work the attention it deserves, and in purchasing this novel, you'll be supporting both an awesome writer and an outstanding company.

THE ELEMENTALS is without a doubt one of the best horror novels I've read this year, a tale that every horror reader should experience, and a story from which every horror writer can learn.

Profile Image for La loca de los libros .
430 reviews403 followers
October 31, 2024
«¡Las madres Savage se comen a sus hijos!.»

¡¡¡Grande McDowell!!! 🔝🔝🔝🔝🔝

🖤🖤🖤🖤🖤

Hoy les traigo una novela de un autor que poco a poco se ha ido convirtiendo en uno de mis favoritos, y es que desde que terminé en mayo con la saga Blackwater sabía que quería leer todo lo que McDowell hubiera publicado. Ansiaba volver a Alabama, respirar sus costumbres, sentir la arena bajo mis pies... Bueno, eso tal vez mejor no 🤣
Por fin he vuelto, y la experiencia no pudo ser más satisfactoria a la par que perturbadora.

En "Los Elementales" nos encontramos con una historia muy en la línea de lo que nos ha mostrado en sus anteriores novelas; una saga familiar plagada de secretos y situaciones oscuras, con el componente sobrenatural siempre muy presente, esa sensación incómoda de que hay algo que va a estallar de un momento a otro. Sabemos que el mal acecha pero no sabemos qué forma tiene ni cómo o cuándo se presentará.
Uno de los principales atractivos de esta novela es la construcción de la tensión y esa atmósfera asfixiante, donde parece que no pasa nada, si bien a lo largo de la trama iremos descubriendo pequeños fenómenos que no son más que una minúscula muestra de lo que nos depararán sus últimos capítulos. Dejándome en mi caso con tremendas ganas de saber más, mi mente curiosa siempre quiere más, más explicaciones, más de sus potentes personajes, de esos que no te abandonan hasta pasado un tiempo y hace que te cueste empezar otra novela porque tu mente sigue en Alabama.
McDowell tiene ese algo mágico que crea en mí esa necesidad imperiosa de seguir leyendo, de descubrir que se oculta tras los muros de la tercera casa y la arena que la mantiene casi enterrada desde hace décadas.
Otro punto a destacar son los personajes y sus diálogos, logrando sacarte alguna que otra carcajada por la hilaridad de las situaciones y la forma en que los personajes tratan temas cotidianos como los prejuicios raciales y las supersticiones locales.

«Eran tres; tres casas solitarias que se erguían al final de la franja de tierra. Estructuras victorianas grandes y altas, que el tiempo había teñido de un gris uniforme»

La mayor parte de la historia transcurre en Beldame, una zona apartada del golfo de Alabama donde, cuando sube la marea, las familias Savage y McCray se quedan aisladas. Allí van para tomarse unos días de descanso tras la muerte de la matriarca de los Savage, Marian.
En el lugar hay tres construcciones idénticas, tres casas de imponente estilo victoriano que gobiernan el lugar, aunque una de ellas se encuentra abandonada desde hace años y apenas es visible.
La arena se ha apropiado de ella hasta casi hacerla desaparecer, parece que la arena intente ocultar algo maligno tras sus paredes. Algo que escapa al control y entendimiento de las familias vecinas.
Los protagonistas pronto comenzarán a sufrir tensiones provocadas entre otros elementos, por las altas temperaturas haciendo que sufran delirios hasta el punto de sugestionar sus acaloradas mentes.
Pero, ¿es solo sugestión?, ¿alucinaciones creadas por ese calor extremo?, ¿o hay algo mucho peor detrás?.
Tendrás que leerlo para descubrirlo 🖤

🔝👌🏻En definitiva, nos encontramos ante una historia de fantasmas narrada con el sello inconfundible de McDowell.
Extraño rituales funerarios, entes sobrenaturales, el calor asfixiante y la arena que se cuela por cualquier resquicio te harán perder horas de tu descanso diario para resolver cuanto antes el secreto que se oculta en esa tercera casa.
No esperen un ritmo frenético porque es muy pausado, mostrando las continuas rencillas de ambas familias y su día a día, pero que ha logrado meterme el mal rollo en el cuerpo, ¡y de qué manera! Jamás pensé que fuera a darme miedo la arena, pero ahora sí que tengo razones de sobra para no acercarme a ella 🤣

Solo me queda esperar a que la editorial Blackie Books nos deleite traduciendo toda su obra y si es en esas ediciones tan bonitas ilustradas por Pedro Oyarbide como las de Blackwater mejor que mejor 😍

⏳🏚️ «Las casas de Beldame eran enormes bloques de oscuridad ancladas en ese mar resplandeciente de arena iluminada por la luna.»

🖤📖💀
Profile Image for Adriana  Lopez.
12 reviews26 followers
February 18, 2018
Una genialidad. Personajes inolvidables. Una gran historia que por momentos da escalofríos.
Profile Image for Rodrigo.
1,466 reviews810 followers
April 9, 2024
Me ha encantado todo, la ambientación, el misterio-terror de esos seres "elementales" de la tercera casa, y el final también me gustó.
Valoración: 9/10
Sinopsis: Después de un extraño incidente en el funeral de la matriarca Marian, las familias McCray y Savage esperan un tranquilo verano en la costa del golfo de Alabama, donde tres antiguas casas victorianas se elevan en la soledad de una playa abrasadora. Dos de las casas son habitables, mientras que la tercera está siendo invadida por la arena: entre sus paredes, algo desconocido se encuentra al acecho. Algo que ha atemorizado a varios miembros de la familia y que aún los persigue en pesadillas. Algo atroz que parece listo para atacar de nuevo�

Consagrado por sus guiones para Tim Burton, Beetlejuice y El extraño mundo de Jack, Michael McDowell ha sido hoy redescubierto: la exhibición de sus linajes literarios lo sitúan, junto a Flannery O’Connor, Carson McCullers y Tennessee Williams, como una de las más eminentes voces del gótico sureño. Los Elementales, novela de culto en los Estados Unidos, amalgama de un modo magistral una sólida construcción de los personajes (entre los cuales, el clima y el paisaje de Beldame son grandes protagonistas), un portentoso registro de la ironía y una trama inolvidable. Pero lo verdaderamente milagroso, aquello indecible, resulta ser el estilo. McDowell demuestra un talento sobrenatural para los diálogos; su imaginación vertiginosa aparece sabiamente balanceada por una metódica y paciente artesanía narrativa.

Admirada como joya del terror, Los Elementales es también considerada una obra maestra en la tradición de las novelas de casas encantadas, y un prodigio de la literatura gótica. Un triple tesoro que la vuelve deslumbrante.
Profile Image for Michelle .
390 reviews164 followers
February 12, 2021
The Elementals is as smooth and luxurious as an aged scotch.

I struggled while reading because I didn't want to put it down. Lounging in Beldame with the Savages and McCrays was blissful, but I also didn't want to read too quickly. I stopped multiple times in attempts to drag the book out as long as possible.

The atmosphere was both subtle and complex, the family dynamics were wonderfully memorable, and the plot was a throw back to childhood tales of ghosts and ghouls around campfires on lazy summer nights.

Fans of any genre will enjoy this southern gothic. It's only February but I have a strong feeling this will end up being my favorite book of the year.
Profile Image for Overhaul.
433 reviews1,254 followers
May 9, 2024
Después de un extraño incidente en el funeral de la matriarca Marian, las familias McCray y Savage esperan un tranquilo verano en la costa del golfo de Alabama, donde tres antiguas casas victorianas se elevan en la soledad de una playa abrasadora. Dos de las casas son habitables, mientras que la tercera está siendo invadida por la arena: entre sus paredes, algo desconocido se encuentra al acecho. Algo que ha atemorizado a varios miembros de la familia y que aún los persigue en pesadillas. Algo atroz que parece listo para atacar de nuevo�

Consagrado por sus guiones para Tim Burton, Beetlejuice y El extraño mundo de Jack, Michael McDowell ha sido hoy redescubierto: la exhibición de sus linajes literarios lo sitúan, junto a Flannery O’Connor, Carson McCullers y Tennessee Williams, como una de las más eminentes voces del gótico sureño.

Los Elementales, novela de culto en los Estados Unidos, amalgama de un modo magistral una sólida construcción de los personajes (entre los cuales, el clima y el paisaje de Beldame son grandes protagonistas), un portentoso registro de la ironía y una trama inolvidable.

Pero lo verdaderamente milagroso, aquello indecible, resulta ser el estilo. McDowell demuestra un talento sobrenatural para los diálogos; su imaginación vertiginosa aparece sabiamente balanceada por una metódica y paciente artesanía narrativa.

Admirada como joya del terror, "Los Elementales" es también considerada una obra maestra en la de las novelas de casas encantadas, y góticas.

Lleno de tanto misterios, rarezas y tantas cosas que no están del todo explicadas pero que no parecen del todo necesarias. Tiene un sentido a su extraña y peculiar manera.

Es un libro de terror gótico sureño que comienza lentamente y llega a un final para mi gusto demasiado apresurado de muerte, y secretos revelados. Eso me ha fastidiado un poco el genial trayecto que llevaba el libro.

Los personajes del libro son muy extraños, la ambientación muy lograda. Sólo flojea en ese aspecto. Buen ritmo pero el final mete sexta y adiós no te vi...✍️Skål🍺
Profile Image for Johann (jobis89).
736 reviews4,567 followers
June 13, 2021
Michael McDowell is 100% one of my fave horror authors.
Profile Image for Mª Carmen.
804 reviews
May 10, 2024
Ha sido una buena lectura. McDowell jugaba en otra liga entre los escritores del género. Puede gustar o no, sobre gustos ya se sabe, pero es indudable que sabía escribir, sabía contar y estará por siempre entre los autores que marcaron la diferencia.

Dice la sinopsis:
Después de un extraño incidente en el funeral de la matriarca Marian, las familias McCray y Savage esperan un tranquilo verano en la costa del golfo de Alabama, donde tres antiguas casas victorianas se elevan en la soledad de una playa abrasadora. Dos de las casas son habitables, mientras que la tercera está siendo invadida por la arena: entre sus paredes, algo desconocido se encuentra al acecho. Algo que ha atemorizado a varios miembros de la familia y que aún los persigue en pesadillas. Algo atroz que parece listo para atacar de nuevo�

¿Qué destaco del libro?

✳️ La portada que edita La bestia equilátera, que es total. La casa, la arena, el atardecer, la luna, etc. Prácticamente todos los elementos en juego están ahí.

✳️ El libro se divide en un prólogo de presentación de personajes, cuatro partes en las que desarrolla la trama y un epílogo final. El ritmo es muy pausado. Se cuece a fuego lento. La pluma del autor recrea la cadencia de los días indolentes de Beldame. Nos centra en lo cotidiano para ir mostrando poco a poco lo que allí ocurre. Al no ser una novela que gire en torno a la acción sino en la cotidianeidad parece que no pasa nada, pero pasan muchas cosas. De los tres libros que llevo leídos de McDowell, este es el que más se asemeja al estilo de King (recordemos que fueron muy amigos, que se influyeron mutuamente y que el maestro King, lo consideraba a su vez su maestro).

✳️ La trama, que posee todos los elementos del gótico sureño. McDowell recrea el tópico de la casa encantada y le da una vuelta de tuerca. Las escenas de terror están muy medidas durante las tres primeras partes del libro para intensificarse en la cuarta y última. Más que terror en estado puro es la atmósfera asfixiante, la negación y el miedo de los personajes lo que genera una sensación opresiva, que, al menos conmigo, funcionó.

✳️ Los personajes, que están dibujados al detalle en una novela que se centra de manera especial en ellos. McDowell dominaba como nadie el trazado de personajes. Dos familias, los Savage y los McCray y seis figuras principales. El perfil de cada uno, las relaciones entre ellos se desgranan de manera minuciosa. Todos a su manera son importantes, pero los tres que más destacan son India, la niña McCray de trece años, Luker, su padre y Odessa, la sirvienta negra de los Savage.
India es la única de los seis que no ha nacido ni se ha criado en Alabama. No ha tenido la educación tradicional de las chicas sureñas. Es fuerte, curiosa, independiente y muy poco convencional incluso para los usos neoyorquinos. Odessa es la persona a la que el resto se dirige en busca de respuestas y protección.Tiene su punto desábrido y una lealtad acrisolada. Ambas mujeres serán las que nos muestren lo que habita en esa tercera casa.

✳️ La ambientación, que es el otro punto fuerte de McDowell. La acción se sitúa en Beldame, una zona apartada en la costa del Golfo de Alabama, donde los Savage y los McCray llevan más de treinta y cinco años pasando el verano. Beldame cuenta únicamente con tres casas victorianas. Es un lugar aislado, sin teléfonos, con casi total carencia de electricidad. Allí no hay tiendas, ni lugares de ocio, ni nada de nada. Solo las tres casas, la playa, la arena omnipresente y el calor. La cadencia de los días es monótona e indolente. Los seis personajes se contagian de dicha cadencia, se sumergen en ella y la disfrutan. La actividad de sus días en Mobile o Nueva York queda suspendida en Beldame, el sitio del que no se acuerdan durante el resto del año y al que siempre vuelven a pesar de todo (hay que leer la novela para entender esta última afirmación).

✳️ La manera en que McDowell resuelve. Me ha gustado el desenlace. Solo le pongo un pero. Ese ritmo pausado durante las tres primeras partes, se rompe al final de la cuarta. No es exactamente que el final sea abrupto o inadecuado, pero sí más apresurado de lo que a mí me hubiera gustado. Entre los capítulos finales y el epílogo me ha faltado algo, quizá un capítulo que desarrollase parte de lo que se cuenta en dicho epílogo.

En conclusión. Una novela de buena factura que recrea el tópico de la casa encantada. Bien escrita, con buenos personajes y magnífica ambientación. Recomendable.

(PD. Leído en mayo de 2024 en lectura conjunta con los amigos del grupo de La banda. Chicos, todo un placer haberla leído con vosotros. Las risas que nos hemos echado no tienen precio)
Profile Image for Kay.
455 reviews4,637 followers
January 7, 2019
Please do not read on if you are easily disturbed by the graphic image below.

This is an image of a little girl right before her death. I'm sure many of you have seen this image. If you're a horror fanatic and feel the pain of this little girl, this is the book for you.




This is my second Michael McDowell Once again, the master of ghost houses and familial interactions as well as making one feel welcome in the Southern State of Alabama.

I cannot express how much Mr McDowell as burrowed into my heart and has terrorised my mind. Dare I say, better than Richard Matheson, who also has a place in my heart with his books and but when I read and this book, I had fallen in love with the world of McDowell's Alabama ghost houses.

Not only is McDowell a fantastic writer of horrific events, but he seamlessly manages to integrate family interactions, wonderful characters (especially India, who I will talk about in my full review) and a very satisfactory set-up and pay-off.. The characters are diverse and black characters are written like real people - which is rare for an author who mainly wrote in the 60s to 80s.

This book is one of the best I've read this year, if not in the last five years.

Thank you Malcolm McDowell

Image result for the elementals malcolm mcdowell

Also R.C. Bray is a legend of audio book readings. He did every character perfectly.
Profile Image for Tom Rimer.
Author8 books298 followers
May 17, 2022
I'm not sure a book could possibly be more "gothic" than this one. Simultaneously terrifying and quirky. I loved it. Cannot believe it's taken me so long to get to it.
Profile Image for Mindi.
1,425 reviews271 followers
February 28, 2025
I felt that while The Elementals was entertaining, essentially it was flawed, and so I was unable to give it a 3 star rating.

Michael McDowell wrote this novel in 1980 during the golden age of paperback horror fiction. Some very talented horror writers were churning out a large number of quality horror novels during this period in the 70's and 80's, and while most of those titles are now out of print, the ones I have managed to find have been exceptionally good.

Recently, Valancourt Books brought a number of these works back into print, with new introductions by other horror writers who were originally inspired by these novels. I have really enjoyed a number of the obscure titles from that time, so when I read the synopsis of The Elementals I was sure I had found another title to add to my list of superb 70's and 80's horror fiction.

I don't want to ruin too much of the plot here, but essentially there are supernatural forces in one of the three houses that make up Beldame, a plot of land on the Alabama Gulf Coast that is owned by two very close and wealthy families. Everyone is afraid of the third house, but for some reason nobody has a problem spending weeks at a time at Beldame, even though a number of people have died there, and there is obviously something wrong with the place.

After the matriarch of one of the families passes away, the remaining relatives decided to spend time at the summer homes in order to regroup and deal with her death. Just don't go in the third house, and don't ask any questions.

The novel is written mostly from the point of view of a wise beyond her years 13-year-old girl who has grown up in New York City, never having been to Alabama until the family funeral. She has an odd relationship with her father, who sees no point in shielding her from anything, but rather allows her to drink, curse, and even see him walking around in the nude at times. It's weird, and while I can appreciate a smart, fearless female protagonist, her reactions to everything around her just seem off for a girl her age.

The novel also shows its age a bit by constantly referring to the maid employed by one of the families as black. We get it. The two families are wealthy white people with a black maid. It's really not necessary to constantly refer to her as the "black woman" who, for some inexplicable reason, is the only person to actually see and understand the supernatural entities at Beldame.

Sadly, there are just too many plot holes to allow me to rank this novel up there with some of my favorite horror stories. The Elementals themselves don't really make a lot of sense, and seem to have no rhyme or reason to their existence. At times, the maid Odessa seems to understand exactly what needs to be done to keep The Elementals at bay, and at others she doesn't have a clue. In the end the family endures even more tragedy because after a string of disturbing instances, nobody has the good sense to stay the hell away from Beldame. There are some genuinely creepy moments in the novel, but overall it just didn't work for me.

Edit: I'm really surprised that almost 10 years later, this review is one of my most popular and most liked. I read it again just now, and I decided to change the term "African American" to just simply "black" because I don't think a single black person in America has ever referred to themselves as African American. I truly believe that white people came up with that term because it felt appropriate or something. Regardless I'm still disturbed by the fact that McDowell felt it necessary to point out the color of this woman's skin every single chance he got. Thanks to everyone who likes and comment on this review.
Profile Image for Pedro Ceballos.
299 reviews32 followers
April 9, 2021
La lectura es grata y fluida. Al trasladarse un par de familias a sus casas de descanso, las cuales son vecinas pero bien aisladas de la ciudad más próxima, la niña empieza a ver y sentir cosas en una de las casas contigua... Decir más ya sería spoiler, parte del disfrute de la novela es encontrar la explicación de lo que sucede.

No he colocado las 5 estrellas porque hay varios detalles que parecieran ser de mucha importancia pero no tener relevancia para la historia y más hacen confundir el tema central de la novela, no lo mencionaré para generar un spoiler. Adicionalmente me hubiese gustado conocer un poco más de historia y origen.
Profile Image for Montzalee Wittmann.
5,066 reviews2,307 followers
May 15, 2020
The Elementals
By: Michael McDowell
Narrated by: R.C. Bray
This is an excellent book for the horror fan that likes the paranormal variety. This is about a couple of families that have grown up together in the south. One moved away to New York but everyone is back for a funeral. The characters are all so fleshed out so well! I could picture someone like each one of them. There are three large homes, one is called The Third House and no one goes into it, ever. The book then reveals why. Very exciting from page one!
It has. R.C. Bray narrating which he is the boss!😁 Excellent!!!
Profile Image for Lizz.
402 reviews99 followers
July 23, 2021
I don’t write reviews.

This book has everything: Southern gothic, odd families, genius loci, magic, mystery and one of the strangest settings ever. The atmosphere of Beldame has stayed with me since I’ve read about it years ago. I spent my childhood summers on the Gulf Coast and the memory of those thick lazy days is powerful stuff.

This story would’ve worked without the “supernatural� parts most likely. The characters were well-developed. It’s the sign of a classy horror story when I don’t want any of the characters to get killed.

The climax was the weakest part in my opinion. Like the days at Beldame blended into each other, this story could’ve continued on endlessly, lazy and satisfying. McDowell had to tie up the loose ends and bring it together somehow, I’m just not sure that this was the best way to do it. Regardless, it’s a wonderful story, one that I’m sure I’ll revisit every few years.

“What’s in that house, child, knows more than you know. What’s in that house, don’t come out of your mind. It don’t have to worry ‘bout rules and behaving like a spirit ought to behave. It does what it does to fool you, it wants to trick you into believing what’s not right. It’s got no truth to it. What it did last week it’s not gone be doing today. You see something in there, it wasn’t there yesterday, it’s not gone be there tomorrow. You stand at one of them doors thinking somethings behind it - nothing’s behind it. It’s waiting for you upstairs, it’s waiting for you downstairs. It’s standing behind you.�
Profile Image for Paul Nelson.
682 reviews155 followers
June 17, 2015
The Elementals by Michael McDowell was first released in 1981 and then re-released in 2014 by Valancourt Books with an introduction by author Michael Rowe.

The story begins with the funeral of Marian Savage, the matriarch of an old and opulent family from Alabama with an intriguingly peculiar and disturbing burial rite.

The Savage family are linked by marriage, friendship and history to the McCrays and both families spend the summer at Beldame. An island compound on which sits three identical Victorian mansions, one owned by the Savages, one by the McCrays and one that sits empty, for reasons unknown. At night the island is cut off from the mainland by the tide, there is literally no escape from what haunts the night.

What the author excels at, what you can actually feel, is the atmosphere, crippling, oppressive heat, the pitch black shroud of night and that third house, slowly being consumed by the fine white sand. McDowell then introduces the characters, with depth and insight, masterful storytelling indeed as the empty house and its story slowly comes to light.

'Worry, clever thought, conversation all were crushed by the weight of the atmosphere.'

India McCray is the young inquisitive daughter with an intense desire to know everything about that third house and the first time she looks in the window, when she sees something. Something that should have turned her head rapidly in the other direction, swiftly followed by a running motion, she'll wish it did in the end, more than anything.

'India’s own black shadow of curiosity stretched across the floor, like a startled residue of the room’s last inhabitant.'

A fearful chill gradually creeps up on you almost unnoticed, but not quite, as the history of the place is slowly revealed. All until the last night on Beldame when the chill manifests into nerve shredding panic and sheer disbelief as the characters you've spent the whole story invested in suddenly face the unthinkable.

A phrase that will remain imprinted and serve as a reminder for my sieve like memory is “Savage mothers eat their children up!� read into that what you will. But if you like your horror akin to a gentle stroll, where you can get to know all your surroundings intimately, followed by a fucking death defying plunge of a cliff into a body of water that you've no clue to the depth of. Then you'll enjoy The Elementals I'm sure.

A 4.5* rating.

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