Coldheart Canyon

Unabridged
Author: Clive Barker
Narrator: Frank Muller
Genres: Fiction, Mystery, Thriller
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date: October 2001
Length: 22 hours
Ratings:
Formats:
  • CD

Overview

Hollywood has made a star of Todd Pickett. But time is catching up with him. After plastic surgery goes awry, Todd needs somewhere to hide away for a few months while his scars heal.

As Todd settles into a mansion in Coldheart Canyon -- a corner of the city so secret it doesn't even appear on a map -- Tammy Lauper, the president of his fan club, comes to the City of Angels determined to solve the mystery of Todd's disappearance. The closer Tammy gets to Todd the more of Coldheart Canyon's secrets she uncovers: the ghosts of A-list stars; Katya Lupi, the cold-hearted, now-forgotten star for whom the Canyon was named, alive and exquisite after a hundred years; and, finally, the door in the bowels of Katya's dream-palace that reputedly opens up to another world, the Devil's Country, where no one has returned without their souls shadowed by what they've seen and done.

Mingling an insiders' view of modern Hollywood with a wild streak of visionary fantasy, Coldheart Canyon is a book without parallel. An irresistible and unmerciful picture of Hollywood and its demons, told with all the style and raw narrative power that has made Clive Barker's books and films a phenomenon worldwide.

Reviews (11)

Cold Heart Canyon

Written by TOXIC on November 4th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Truly if you are offended by strange and graphic sex scenes-this may not be for you-but-the debauched characters are damned for their perversions-so-without the graphic depictions the penalty these ghosts pay would not be understood.As far as the too long reviews go--I prefer longer books as I listen during long boring shifts as a truck driver-and-finally...This book is read by the late Frank Muller-who has been called "the Lawrence Oliver" of narration--I tend to pick books based purely on him reading them....not for everyone

Don't go to Coldheart Canyon

Written by Anonymous on February 14th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I was expecting more from the creator of the "Hellraiser" series. Instead, I get Jackie Collins meets Stephen King. Other have complained about the weird sex. Okay, maybe animals having sex with ghosts or ghosts having sex with animals is not for everybody. My main complaint is that this novel is really too long. I could not find myself caring for the characters. There was simply no suspense. My guess is that Mr. Barker was simply creating scenes to up the book's number of pages. I recommend that all horror fans pass on this title.

WeirdHeart Canyon

Written by Anonymous on January 17th, 2008

  • Book Rating: 2/5

I am usually pretty open about weird books, but this was more than I could stand. Call me a prude, but I found this book sexually disgusting at times, and couldn't finish it. I found that I didn't care what happened to Tammy or Todd. Too perverted for me.

Entertaining

Written by Anonymous on March 25th, 2007

  • Book Rating: 4/5

This was entertaining to say the least. My first Clive book and after reading the other reviews I was hesitant. But I found that once I opened up to the "stangeness", it was fun to see what craziness would come next. I loved it that it was LONG! I have a very long commute and found the time just flying by!. In fact one day, I was so ingrossed, I passed by my exit and it took some doing to get back on track. :) It isn't for the "lighthearted" for sure, so be warned.

Coldheart Canyon

Written by Anonymous on October 27th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 1/5

This book should have been rated XXX. While I'm not a prude, this was just too much. The reader's affected voice made it difficult to pay attention to the book, which may be a good thing. I listened up to the 9th CD, and then just had to quit - it was disgusting.

Coldaheart Canyon

Written by Anonymous on August 23rd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I love Clive Barker, however, this book was excruciating to get through - I couldn't wait for it to end and it was very long.

Sex the Supernatural

Written by Nancy Roberts on February 7th, 2005

  • Book Rating: 3/5

Sometimes I really liked it, sometimes it seemed unspeakably bad. I certainly would have been embarassed to read it aloud! Kudos to Frank Muller for doing an excellent job and never laughing out loud once as he described truly bizarre activities. All in all, the sheer inventiveness of the plot and situations - plus some tried-and-true, if predictable characters, kept me listening the whole way through.

Thick Skin Required

Written by Kregg from New Buffalo, MI on February 3rd, 2005

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Clive is a great novelist. Key there is NOVEL. This is a looong story. However, if you're listening to shorten the commute, that's a good thing. Additionally, he spares nothing when it comes to sexual deviance and gore. If you can handle that and enjoy the supernatural, this is for you. Well read.

Cold Heart Canyon

Written by Jenifer Moore on December 21st, 2004

  • Book Rating: 4/5

Not for the faint of heart, Clive does another riveting albeit LONG character drivin story. Lots of "elicit sex" so beware. All an all tho' it made my hour and 30 minute drive to work much more forgettable.

Coldheart Canyon

Written by Anonymous on December 15th, 2004

  • Book Rating: 1/5

I listened up to the 8th CD and then gave up. I found it tiresome and too focused on sex and supernatural.

Author Details

Author Details

Barker, Clive

"Barker began his career in the arts as a playwright and director for a ""fringe"" theater company he formed in London, staging works with titles like ""Frankenstein in Love"" and ""The History of the Devil"". While starving for his art, he began writing horror short stories in his spare time, not expecting them to be marketable. The first publisher who read them, however, asked for more, and in 1984 they were published, in three volumes, as ""The Books of Blood"". Propelled by a Stephen King jacket quotation which read ""I have seen the future of horror and its name is Clive Barker"", the books sold extremely well and launched a career in which Barker has written, directed and/or executive produced several distinctive horror films that are both gruesome and literate.

Barker's goal has been to produce horror films that take themselves seriously, as opposed to the campy, tongue-in-cheek fare that has dominated the genre in recent years. He made his directorial debut with Hellraiser (1987), adapted by Barker from his novella ""The Hellbound Heart"". Described by the London periodical ""Time Out"" as ""a serious, intelligent and disturbing horror film"", this exceptional project was produced on a shoestring budget of $1.5 million and grossed more than $30 million. ""Hellraiser"" introduced the sharp-featured ""prince of pain"" character who has been given the affectionate nickname ""Pinhead"" by an enthusiastic and bloodthirsty audience. Pinhead also appeared in Hellbound: Hellraiser II (1988) and Hellraiser III: Hell on Earth (1992), both of which were executive-produced by Barker but directed by others. He has no control over the extensive marketing of his creation - whom he describes as ""the Noel Coward of the lower depths"" - because he sold those rights for $1 million in the deal that allowed him to direct the first installment.

Barker's second outing as a writer-director was Nightbreed (1990), adapted from his novel ""Cabal"", in which fellow horror auteur David Cronenberg had a role as a sinister psychiatrist.

Though Barker has been hailed in some quarters as a major innovator and a rare prose stylist, others claim that his greatest talent is as a clever recycler of what has worked well in the past - someone who spices up the old formulae with liberal helpings of unconventional sexuality and surreal, over-the-top, violence. In recent years Barker has been concentrating on writing fantasy fiction and in 1992 he published his first children's book, ""The Thief of Always"", which features 27 of his own illustrations."