THE INTRUDERS is the harrowing story of a near fatal encounter with the forces of darkness and malevolence. Pat Montandon, well known West Coast TV talk show hostess, had no reason to believe in the power of the supernatural - either for good or for evil - when she moved into a spacious apartment in a town house overlooking San Francisco Bay, an apartment that appeared to offer sanctuary from her stressful career. Instead, as bizarre incident followed incident, climaxing in the tragic death by fire of her closest friend, she was forced to acknowledge that she was locked in a mortal struggle with dark and menacing forces. A true story, as riveting in its way as The Exorcist, this account will intrigue all those drawn by the continuing fascination of the occult. Charming, articulate Pat Montandon - one of San Francisco's best known party givers in a city where entertaining is a way of life - was caught up, along with her guests, in the color and gaiety of an "astrology party" when something went dangerously awry. A tarot reader, hired to entertain, took umbrage instead at what he considered Pat's slighting. as he and his uninvited entourage swept out of the party, the furious man shrieked a curse on hostess and house alike. Over the next two years Pat Montandon suffered an uncanny sequence of misfortunes - misfortunes she could account for only as emanating from some malevolent influence. Her apartment was repeatedly vandalized and fire ravaged, her car smashed several times, her career disrupted, her romances blighted. A biting chill pierced her apartment year round, despite repeated attempts to repair the heating system, and casement windows, locked from within, suddenly stood open. Psychic investigators who have studied the house as well as Pat Montandon's own aura, have found bizarre and inexplicable phenomena. An exorcism has been performed, and Pat Montandon is now successfully recuperating from her life and death duel with dark forces. THE INTRUDERS is an eerie true life account of the supernatural - a story told by a doubter who now can't not believe.
This is an intensely interesting book. I read it many years ago. The suspense level is high. Having lived in San Francisco, I have seen the haunted building on Lombard Street many times. The space is now worth five million dollars.
Pat Montandon narrates her chilling experience in late 1960's San Francisco. Her playgirl life was shattered by a chain of unexplained and tragic events.
I read the book because I heard about the mystery on the podcast "Dark House." It fascinated me enough that I sought out the book and having at one time driven down Lombard while on vacation.
Montandon has an easy to read style; it's been awhile since I've devoured a non-fiction (?) book.
I recommend this book; it's a mix of biography, mystery and paranormal.
Interesting and mildly unnerving read. While reading an online story about haunted houses, after a late night movie binge with a friend, I came across an entry about a house at the foot of Lombard Street in SF. A book about this house was even published, in which tied several untimely deaths to the house. The author was a former well-known local TV personality back when local programming really meant something in the SF Bay Area. The time is just before and during my early childhood in Oakland, just across the Bay. I had to read this book.
The author lived in the house, at the time divided into apartments, for almost a decade. While she loved its location and how it could be used for entertaining at parties, living there eventually affected her health and well-being. Her story has several focal points that make the book an intriguing read: There is the fateful tale of the tarot card reader who cursed the author, her life, and the house. There are countless, collaborated instances recorded of strange happenings and feelings of extreme discomfort. And then the deeply personal tragedy of her close friend and associate being found dead in the apartment while it was in flames - her cause of death undetermined (to this day).
I agree that some places can have a certain feel to them, or retain an atmosphere of past events. The fact that the case bothered the lead detective, who also hunted the Zodiac Killer, is an eerie touch. I thought that while the tone of the book at times felt a bit fake to possibly both cover some unwise (to me) life choices as well as deal with a mounting emotional and vague topics (always hard to know how to communicate those), overall it did a very good job of balancing her personal experiences, providing collaborations by others, and documenting such evidence as she could find in a creditable manner.
Several names mentioned throughout the book I recognized from newspaper and TV familiarity over the years as I grew up. Reading the book brings back some strong memories for me of growing up in the SF Bay Area, the descriptions are so true. Some from the latter part of the book I recognize now, living an hour to the north of these events. This, for me, makes the story feel like a family secret just now being told. The book did not at all feel like reading a sensational cash-in. I do recommend it.
3.5 stars interesting ... not scary but very interesting account of pat montandons version of what happened when she lived in San Francisco , to me seeing Alcatraz would be creepy enough but she lived in an apartment that really had some strange events; sounds like she was depressed during this period but nonetheless worth reading but it’s not scary that’s a forewarning
According to the back cover of this book, this is the story of a woman’s real encounters with the supernatural. The apartment she lives in is cursed, and strange phenomena occur while she is living there. But, in the actual reading of the book, you realize that there are no strange phenomena. The author feels sadness and despair whenever she is in the house, and when anything bad happens to her, she immediately blames it on the house. The author seems to be the type of person who wants to blame misfortune on outside influences rather than on just the ebb and flow of life. She gets a string of bad luck and blames it on the supernatural as a way of coping with the tragedies. Not a good book at all. I just wanted to grab the author by the collar, slap her in the face, and yell, “Snap out of it!!”