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A Nightmare on Elm Street: Perchance to Dream
AuthorNatasha Rhodes
LanguageEnglish
SeriesA Nightmare on Elm Street
Release number
4
GenreHorror
PublisherBlack Flame
Publication date
28 February 2006
Publication placeUnited Kingdom
Media typePrint (Paperback)
Pages412
ISBN9781844163229
OCLC62761341
Preceded byA Nightmare on Elm Street: Protégé 
Followed byA Nightmare on Elm Street: The Dream Dealers 
Websitehttps://natasharhodes.wixsite.com/official-author-site/a-nightmare-on-elm-street-perchance--

A Nightmare on Elm Street: Perchance to Dream is a 2006 British horror novel written by Natasha Rhodes and published by Black Flame.[1][2] A tie-in to the Nightmare on Elm Street series of American horror films, it is the fourth installment in a series of five Nightmare on Elm Street novels published by Black Flame and pits Jacob Daniel Johnson, a young man with the power to suppress the dreams of others, against supernatural killer Freddy Krueger.[3]

Plot

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Alice Johnson's son, Jacob Daniel Johnson, has spent the last five years in Westin Hills Psychiatric Hospital, having been placed there when he was 13. Jacob was manipulated into killing his foster parents by Freddy Krueger, a serial child killer who, after being burned to death by angry parents, now haunts the Dream World. Jacob has telepathic abilities, which he has been using to suppress the dreams of the people of Springwood, Ohio, to protect them from Freddy. After Freddy tricks him into killing four other Westin Hills patients, Jacob breaks out of the asylum with help from his caseworker Jack Kane and goes on the run, pursued by the Springwood PD. Kane believes Jacob can help him steal Freddy's powers with a Deathstone. Freddy's powers were granted to him by Dream Demons, and the Deathstone, once activated by a human sacrifice, will make Kane the Dream Demons' new avatar while Freddy will be left trapped in the Deathstone.

Upon entering Springwood, Doctor Sally Spencer, a psychiatrist brought in by the police to help deal with the disorder caused by the townspeople's inability to dream, is attacked by Freddy, who kills Sally's partner, Mitchell, and crashes her SUV. Sally abandons her vehicle and the Freddy and Jacob-related paperwork within it, which is found by Ella Harris, a reporter for Springwood High's student newspaper, and a delinquent named Mathew Irwin. Freddy murders Matt after manipulating him into calling his and Ella's classmates to tell them about Freddy, whose power, diminished due to a lack of fear from Springwood's populace to feed on, will be replenished as knowledge of him spreads among the children of Springwood. As Freddy picks off Ella's friends one by one, he orders her to kill Jacob. Ella and her remaining friends Henry and Jennifer are joined by Sally as they search for Jacob, who has been taken in by Kane.

Jacob reluctantly goes along with Kane's plan to sacrifice Sarah, a kidnapped Westin Hills patient, to activate the Deathstone. The ritual is interrupted by Ella's group and a trio of police officers, and, in the ensuing chaos, Freddy possesses Kane. Freddy slaughters Sarah, the officers, and Sally before Kane frees himself, having stolen half of Freddy's power; the two engage in a reality-warping duel on a runaway train, with Freddy emerging victorious, reclaiming his pilfered power, and killing Kane. Jacob tries to complete the Deathstone ritual with himself as the sacrifice by committing suicide, but accidentally shoots Jen. Jacob then enters Freddy's mind, where Freddy shows off the captive souls of all of his victims, including Jacob's mother, Alice. In desperation, Jacob unleashes all of Springwood's pent-up dream energy against Freddy, freeing all of the tortured souls and overwhelming Freddy, who explodes and is banished back to the Dream World. Ella, Henry, and Jacob's victory celebration is short-lived, as all three of them are arrested and committed to Westin Hills, where Jacob, as he succumbs to drug-induced slumber, is taunted by Freddy.

Reception

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Louis Fowler of Bookgasm felt the book, despite suffering from drawbacks like too many uninteresting characters, awkward pacing, and Freddy Krueger being relegated to "second-banana" status, still had a "great" premise and was "entertaining enough, showing extreme promise for the series."[4]

References

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  1. ^ Stephen Jones, ed. (2007). The Mammoth Book of Best New Horror 18. Constable & Robinson. Introduction: Horror in 2006. ISBN 9780786720491.
  2. ^ "10 dintre cei mai faimosi scriitori de horror". spynews.ro. Intact Media Group. 17 March 2020. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
  3. ^ Marie Toft, ed. (2006). What Do I Read Next? 2006: A Reader's Guide To Current Genre Fiction, Volume 2. Gale. p. 232. ISBN 9780787690243.
  4. ^ Fowler, Louis (11 April 2006). "A Nightmare on Elm Street: Perchance to Dream". bookgasm.com. Internet Archive. Archived from the original on 23 June 2017. Retrieved 22 November 2024.
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[[Category:2006 British novels]] [[Category:2000s horror novels]] [[Category:Black Flame books]] [[Category:British horror novels]] [[Category:Ghost novels]] [[Category:A Nightmare on Elm Street (franchise) mass media]] [[Category:Novels based on films]] [[Category:Novels with multiple narrators]] [[Category:Splatterpunk novels]] [[Category:Supernatural novels]] [[Category:Third-person narrative novels]]