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Book Reviews of Cellar of Horror

Cellar of Horror
Cellar of Horror
Author: Ken Engalde
ISBN-13: 9780312909598
ISBN-10: 0312909594
Publication Date: 3/1989
Pages: 277
Rating:
  • Currently 3.3/5 Stars.
 11

3.3 stars, based on 11 ratings
Publisher: St. Martin's Press
Book Type: Mass Market Paperback
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

6 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed Cellar of Horror on + 18 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Immortality was his perverted goal. Rape, toture,murder and cannibalism were his legacy
DustyShu avatar reviewed Cellar of Horror on + 67 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
This is certainly not the best written true crime book I've ever read. Shocking? Yes. Horrible? Certainly. It starts with a lot of promise, but gets a bit lost in the middle. The author makes time jumps seemingly without relevance, rather than as an attempt to explain the circumstances.
swingsistert avatar reviewed Cellar of Horror on + 78 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
A chilling picture of mental illness and the horror it creates. A quick read.
reviewed Cellar of Horror on + 19 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 1
3520 North Marshall Street in Philadelphia is a house tainted with the stench of burning flesh. What police found there was an incredible nightmare made real. Four young women had been held captive--some for four months--half-naked and chained. They had been tortured, starved, and repeatedly raped. But more grotesque discoveries lay in the kitchen: human limbs frozen, a torso burned to cinders, an empty pot suspiciously scorched....

This is not a story for the faint-hearted. It is a shocking true account of the self-proclaimed minister with a long history of mental illness, whose bizarre plan to create his own "baby factory" preyed upon the susceptible and the retarded. It is a macabre web spun around the twin spectors of money and religion, tangled with courtroom drama and lawyers' tactics, sure to send a chill into your very soul.
reviewed Cellar of Horror on + 170 more book reviews
Very bizarre! Interesting how the book is wrote more like you're having a conversation with someone, rather than reading a novel...IMO.
reviewed Cellar of Horror on + 5 more book reviews
The first part oft he book, like any book about a crazy person, is about Gary Heidnik himself. The middle section of the book contains details and scenarios about the women Heidnik kidnapped, abused and murdered. The book then goes into nearly a line-by-line retelling of the trial after Gary is caught, which comes across as very dry, unless you like reading about trials.