Monday, August 4, 2025

Orphans by Ed Naha (1989): We're a Happy Family

Now this is some serious paperback horror cover art. Such detail. Such care. Such skulls. What's this family portrait telling us? Maybe that there are few things more frightening for a child than the idea that her parents are not who they seem? Or perhaps this novel will expose the hypocrisies of the adult world, its shallow middle-class ambitions, its forced conformity, its ability to cover up even the most hideous horrors?

But Orphans is about none of these things. Published in November 1989 by Dell, this slim little novel by Ed Naha is competently, if unimaginatively, written, occupying that weird little subgenre space of kinda-sorta medical/science fiction horror (meh) with undead-gone-amuck (yay!). Naha is mostly in young adult fiction gear, writing at the most basic, one-dimensional level, refusing in any way to engage in insight or metaphor. Every character seems to be smiling all the time; indeed I have never read a book in which the word "smile" is invoked so often and so lazily, often several times on a single page. 

Naha, a horror/mystery screenwriter/novelist, keeps the story moving, sure, his evil kids creeping out our main teacher character, but I never felt involved or intrigued. References to fog aren't enough to evoke true atmosphere, and characters who exchange banal jokes and tired flirtations just drift off the page. However, once we learn what is really going on with these creepy kids around town, things start to get juicy. Bloody. Gory. In fact, it gets almost to Re-Animator-levels of ridiculous B-movie violence. Unexpected, after such a PG-rated buildup.

Recommended lightly, and solely for the last third or so when shit gets gnarly. Otherwise, unless you're as obsessed with the cover as I am, you could probably skip it. And speaking of that cover, can anyone make out the artist's signature? "R.S. Br__"? Bottom right corner? I'd be ever so grateful if any of y'all could help ID this guy!

Postscript: the artist has been discovered: R.S. Brown

4 comments:

Jack Tripper said...

I believe the artist is R.S. Brown, who most notably did the covers for D.B. Drumm’s (AKA Naha and John Shirley) post-apocalyptic mens adventure series Traveler.

William S. Wilson said...

I interviewed Naha a decade or so ago and this originally started life as a film script in the mid-80s. The company was deciding to fund this one or another script about a killer doll named Chucky. I bet you can guess which one they chose. So he ended up turning it into this novel.

Will Errickson said...

Yes, thanks, Jack! I compared this to the signature on one of the Traveler books and lo and behold, they’re the same. Not familiar with him till now; also looks like he used two different style sigs as well.

https://www.isfdb.org/cgi-bin/ea.cgi?218833+None

Astroboymn said...

I had a book by Ed Naha written in 1974 covering horror movies. It was pretty good but I took umbrage at his disdain for Rosemary's Baby - citing it as being based on Ira Levin's novel of "coffee table horror." Even as a kid I was like, "Oh grow up, Ed Naha!"