Chapter One
Ignatius Martin Perrish spent the night drunk and doing terrible things. He woke the next morning with a headache, put his hands to his temples, and felt something unfamiliar, a pair of knobby pointed protuberances. He was so ill wet-eyed and weak he didn’t think anything of it at first, was too hungover for thinking or worry.
But when he was swaying above the toilet, he glanced at himself in the mirror over the sink and saw he had grown horns while he slept. He lurched in surprise, and for the second time in twelve hours he pissed on his feet.
Chapter Two
He shoved himself back into his khaki shorts he was still wearing yesterday’s clothesÑand leaned over the sink for a better look.
They weren’t much as horns went, each of them about as long as his ring finger, thick at the base but soon narrowing to a point as they hooked upward. The horns were covered in his own too-pale skin, except at the very tips, which were an ugly, inflamed red, as if the needle points at the ends of them were about to poke through the flesh. He touched one and found the point sensitive, a little sore. He ran his fingers along the sides of each and felt the density of bone beneath the stretched-tight smoothness of skin.
His first thought was that somehow he had brought this affliction upon himself. Late the night before, he had gone into the woods beyond the old foundry, to the place where Merrin Williams had been killed. People had left remembrances at a diseased black cherry tree, its bark peeling away to show the flesh beneath. Merrin had been found like that, clothes peeled away to show the flesh beneath. There were photographs of her placed delicately in the branches, a vase of pussy willows, Hallmark cards warped and stained from exposure to the elements. Someone Merrin’s mother, probablyÑhad left a decorative cross with yellow nylon roses stapled to it and a plastic Virgin who smiled with the beatific idiocy of the functionally retarded.
He couldn’t stand that simpering smile. He couldn’t stand the cross either, planted in the place where Merrin had bled to death from her smashed-in head. A cross with yellow roses. What a fucking thing. It was like an electric chair with floral-print cushions, a bad joke. It bothered him that someone wanted to
bring Christ out here. Christ was a year too late to do any good. He hadn’t been anywhere around when Merrin needed Him.
Ig had ripped the decorative cross down and stamped it into the dirt. He’d had to take a leak, and he did it on the Virgin, drunkenly urinating on his own feet in the process. Perhaps that was blasphemy enough to bring on this transformation. But noÑhe sensed that there had been more. What else, he couldn’t recall. He’d had a lot to drink.
He turned his head this way and that, studying himself in the mirror, lifting his fingers to touch the horns, once and again.
From the book HORNS: A Novel by Joe Hill. Copyright c 2010 by Joe Hill. Reprinted by permission of William Morrow, an Imprint of HarperCollins Publishers
Joe Hill, author of the critically acclaimed 2007 bestseller, Heart-Shaped Box, returns with an utterly original, terrifying novel of psychological and supernatural suspense.
Ignatius Martin Perrish spent the night drunk and doing terrible things. He woke the next morning with a headache, put his hands to his temples and felt something unfamiliar, a pair of knobby, pointed protuberances. He didn’t think anything of it at first, but when he was swaying over the toilet, he glanced at himself in the mirror above the sink and saw he had grown horns while he slept.
The second son of a renowned musician and doting mother, Ig Perrish has a privileged life and expectations of a bright future with his childhood sweetheart, Merrin Williams. His life takes an unexpected turn when Merrin is brutally killed and suspicion falls on Ig. A year later, he is nowhere near over his grief or his rage—feelings that come to a head in a lost evening of alcohol and hate. When he wakes the next morning, Ig discovers his surreal transformation and an incredible power he soon turns toward vengeance. Unfortunately, Ig is about to learn that when it comes to revenge, the devil is in the details.…
Hardcover: 384 pages
Publisher: William Morrow & Co, Inc ( February 16, 2010 )
Item #: 73-1740
ISBN: 9780061147951
Product Dimensions: 5.5 x 8.25 x 0.91 inches
Product Weight: 14.0 ounces

One of Joe Hill's better written books. A fast paced page turner.
Reviewer: dlcobb
Don't bother with this garbage.
Reviewer: Chris
BOM sent this to me and I had no idea what to expect from it since I didn't order it. I was surprised at how much I really enjoyed reading it. I don't know what it says about me but I connected with the main character and I thought it was really all of the "confessions" were fascinating because I generally think that everyone has sick confessions floating around in themselves. It also made me think, if I was around him, what would I confess?
Reviewer: Sarah
What a boring book. It started out okay, but quickly became a book that was a chore to read.
Reviewer: Cynthia L
I found it hard to read, but I finished it. I found that I couldn't stand the main
guy. So if you are wanting to be wasting a few hours go ahead and read this
book.
Reviewer: Stormtower