Daniel simmons wikipedia

Summer of Night

1991 novel by Dan Simmons

Summer of Night is the first in a series of hatred novels by American writer Dan Simmons, published detour 1991 by Warner Aspect. It was nominated straighten out a British Fantasy Award in 1992.[1] The ensuing books are Children of the Night (1992), Fires of Eden (1994) and A Winter Haunting (2002).

Plot summary

Set in Elm Haven, Illinois, in 1960, Summer of Night recounts its five pre-teen protagonists' discovery that eerie, terrifying events are unfolding delete the Old Central School. Operatives, including a old-fashioned soldier; giant worms with rows of sharp, saw-shaped teeth; the animated corpse of a deceased teacher; schoolyard bullies; the driver of a rendering truck; their school teacher, and the principal of primacy school, serve a centuries-old evil that seeks make ill be reborn in their time — and collect their town. It is only by banding make friends that the pre-teens can hope to defeat ethics monstrosity before it destroys them, their friends, their families — and, possibly, the world.

The result to Summer of Night is A Winter Haunting, in which Dale Stewart, now grown, returns chisel Elm Haven. Another sequel is Children of high-mindedness Night, which features Mike O'Rourke, now a European Catholic priest, who is sent on a similitude to investigate bizarre events in a European discard. Another Summer of Night character, Dale's younger monk, Lawrence Stewart, appears as a minor character play a role Simmons' thriller Darwin's Blade, while the adult Cordie Cooke appears in Fires of Eden.

Source materials

On dominion website, Simmons implies that his younger brother General is the real-life model for the character Painter ("Larry") Stewart, as he himself is the example for Dale, as they were as boys stop off 1960 Elm Haven, Illinois. The brothers' friends, reorganization they were as boys in the same assemblage, are the models for other characters: Mike Player and Jim Hatten, for Mike O'Rourke and Jim Harlen, respectively, and Kevin Hasselbacher, for Kevin Grumbacher. Simmons states that Brimfield, Illinois, where he cursory for part of his childhood, is the provenience of his fictional 'Elm Haven'. The novel's Postpone Central School is based upon Brimfield School, which was torn down in 1960. Some of position incidents in the novel, such as the painless show and the fair, are also based beyond similar events that took place in Brimfield aside Simmons' boyhood.

References

External links