A husband and wife retreat with their young son to a house in the woods in order to escape their hectic professional life in San Francisco for a summer. All the elements of a perfect thriller are here - remoteness, a small town with a secret, threats from town officials, a growing rift in the main characters' marriage, a strangely superannuated (no, I didn't say "supernatural," but perhaps could have) couple also living in the woods.
Is this going to be a re-telling of Hansel and Gretel? We might begin to think that's where this story is headed as we read how the son in the family is strangely drawn to the old couple's dilapidated house a little distance away from his parents' rental in the forest. But no, some less obviously sinister plot is afoot here.
The story is told, not so much in chapters, as in slices. Each slice focuses on the growing dilemma of one of the characters. We see the situation of mother, father, sheriff, handyman, each in turn getting more precarious. Campbell Black skillfully steps us from one jagged, slippery stone in the stream to the next. We're thrown off balance, but never quite lose our footing. We both seek the safety of solid ground on the other side - and dread what we'll find there.
This is a literate, gripping story. I think this book will encourage you to search out all of Campbell Black's suspense books (some written under the aliases of "Campbell Armstrong" and "Thomas Altman").
When you've read those, I suggest you go on to the works of a different Campbell - Ramsey Campbell, starting perhaps with "Midnight Sun," another tale of gathering danger in the woods. Ramsey Campbell doesn't always etch individual characters as well as Campbell Black does, but he also weaves from a literary, fateful skein, and is a master of ominous atmospherics. With the books of these these two geniuses of the genre headed your way, you'll be singing, "The Campbells are Coming - Hurrah! - Hurrah!"