Maggie’s Grave: A Horror Novel by David Sodergren
Paperbacks and Pugs, 2020
ISBN: 9798680192276
Available: Paperback, Kindle edition ( Amazon.com )
Things not to do when visiting Scotland: Don’t visit a dead witch’s mountaintop grave; don’t light the grave’s cross on fire; and DON’T have sex on the grave with one of the local teenagers. Why? Because when Maggie the witch wakes up she is going to be extremely pissed off and want revenge on the tiny town below, since they cut her baby out of her and killed it and her a few hundred years prior. Author David Sodergren is quickly carving out a niche as one of the better writers in the horror genre.
The plot is actually a bit more elaborate than that, but there is no sense spoiling the fun for the reader. There’s just enough time spent developing the setting and characters to get you interested in them, and then it’s off to the races. In this case, the main characters are the four (and only) teen-agers in the dying town of Auchenmullan, with a whopping total population of forty-seven. Almost no one is ever born there, and people only move away, not to the town. The teens have nothing to do but work an occasional menial job, have sex, get drunk, and hang out at the local bowling alley. Heck, their theme song, to the Joan Jett melody, is “I love…t’get drunk n’ bowl!” A dumb, wandering, American tourist provides some diversion, and on the trip to Maggie’s grave, all hell breaks loose.
As he did in his first two books, Sodergren keeps his foot on the gas throughout the book; there’s no slowdown. He fills in the backstory of Maggie throughout the book, and the other members of the town are involved in the plot. Thankfully, the mystery isn’t revealed in one long, drawn-out monologue at the end, but in pieces where appropriate, so the novel’s pacing doesn’t slow down. Maggie is responsible for almost all of the bloodletting in the book, and she makes enough of a mess to keep gorehound readers happy: she has a habit of inventing new ways to mangle people when they are unclothed and in compromising positions. She also isn’t constrained by the boundaries of the town, which allows the story to move outside of Auchenmullan at times for some variety. There’s dark humor throughout, and, once again, the author comes up with a perfect twist for the ending that the reader won’t see coming. The story also does a good job throughout playing on the classic Vulcan axiom: do the needs of the many truly outweigh the needs of the few…or the one?
It’s now a string of three winning horror novels in a row for the author. Horror fans won’t be disappointed by this one. Recommended.
Reviewed by Murray Samuelson.
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