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Book Review: Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill

Strange Weather: Four Short Novels by Joe Hill

William Morrow, 2017

ISBN-13: 978-0062663115

Available: Hardcover, paperback Kindle edition, Audible audiobook, audio CD

 

There’s something decidedly different about Joe Hill. His novels and short stories often defy categorization, eschewing the conventions of horror and tropes of speculative fiction in favor of something much more… interesting.

 

Strange Weather is comprised of four short novels. The worlds concocted by the author are far from perfect, but are intriguing; they are familiar, but ill-suited to reality. The protagonists are not sympathetic characters readers will want to root for, but they are fascinating.

 

“Snapshot,” the first story, introduces readers to an awkward teen who discovers his elderly neighbor has had her memories stolen by a man with a strange camera. When the boy attempts to foil the man’s plans, he discovers something demented within the device. Hill manages to twist this story into something heartwrenching.

 

The second story, “Loaded,” could be the author’s anti-Second Amendment tale. A mall cop goes on a ill-advised shooting spree while trying to stop a killer, until he can no longer be described as a “good guy with a gun”. The unraveling of the character as his sad world crumbles is intriguing.

 

“Aloft” is the oddest tale in Strange Weather, more reminiscent of 20th Century Ghosts than his horror material. A man afraid of heights decides to try skydiving but manages to fall straight into a cloud, and remains there. An unusual setting, to say the least. “Aloft” will challenge Hill’s fans.

 

Finally, “Rain” can be summarized as a classic Joe Hill tale, with plenty of weirdness and amazement in the setting and a strong, unique cast of characters. When the sky opens up over Boulder, Colorado, nails pound the town, skewering the citizens in a multitude of ways. The downpour is only the beginning, as the aftermath of the apocalyptic event brings out the worst in society.

 

Hill’s style resonates as always: rich and full of imagery that will stick to the psyche, yet never obtuse or indulgent. His depictions of the the everyday person, and lives, are outstanding, and he has an affinity for the weird that seems to be building with each release. That’s a wonderful thing. Strange Weather is reading that will breeze by but leave a scar. Highly recommended.

 

Editor’s note: Strange Weather is the winner of the 2017 Bram Stoker Award for Superior Achievement in a Fiction Collection.

 

 

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