4.5 stars.
THE AUCTIONEER, by Joan Samson, was first issued in 1976. This new edition released by Valancourt Books in 2018 comes with an all new introduction by Grady Hendrix, as well as an afterword by the author's husband, Warren Carberg.
This novel takes place in a farming community called Harlowe. In a quiet, peaceful American town where change is very slow to come, John and Mim Moore farm the land that John's family had owned for many generations. With their beautiful four-year-old daughter, Hildie, and John's mother, "Ma", living with them, we have a perfect postcard picture of perhaps a "simpler" time in America.
However, the author is quick to show the slow and calculating terror that can overcome a community almost before they even realize what's happening. In this case, it all starts with a newcomer named Perly Dunsmore and his slight request for old items to be donated to his planned auctions . . .
"When your life turns into a lie, the first person you need to deceive is yourself . . . "
Samson weaves this tale with exact precision. We'll get a taste of the happy Moore family going about their everyday duties together, and then a small intrusion into their slice of paradise to give the first stirrings of trouble.
THE AUCTIONEER is not "in-your-face" horror, but a much more subtle, slowly mounting terror that takes a while to reach its peak. Nonetheless, once it starts, the emotions, losses, and their implications never let up--the fear is always present, ratcheting up inexorably page by page.
". . . He won't stop . . . There are people like that. Either you give in or you run."
The language used is beautiful in its simplicity. We learn as much of how these changes are slowly devastating their traditional way of life by what is NOT stated as we do by what is. The omissions; usual outings that are cancelled, and the strain upon the household, shows us more than words could convey. This was true--not only in households--but also in interactions between neighbors.
". . . They talked the way they always had, except that now the familiar conversations seemed to be built on a silence as deep as the one that prevailed at home."
Overall, I felt this was a brilliantly executed story that showcases how "unwanted" change can stealthily creep in on even the most complacent of towns. We are shown the old-time values, and how they contrast with "newer" lifestyles in more populated regions. Even the most loyal of citizens can be taken in by smooth-talking charlatans if the topic is right.
When things are beyond out-of-hand, how would you react, and how far would you go to protect your family and your way of life?
Recommended!