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Book Review: The Loney by Andrew Michael Hurley


The Loney, by Andrew Michael Hurley

Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2016

ISBN: 9780544746527

Available: Kindle ebook, print, Audible audiobook

The Loney, set in 1976, is told in a series of recollections for a majority of the book by our narrator, Smith. It centers on what was supposed to be a pleasant trip to a small community, followed by a pilgrimage to a shrine in northern England. Father Wilfred, the priest of the local church, has passed away suddenly, and the bishop has selected Father Bernard as his replacement. Father Wilfred often took a small number of his parishioners, including the Smith family, to the shrine, during Easter. Father Bernard proposes a trip for his first Easter at his new post, much to the chagrin of the young Miss Bunce, who suggests a new locale; but the parishoners venture to the traditional place. This is a key theme throughout the novel: the “new” wanting to, according to traditionalists, encroach on the “old”, especially when it comes to religious practices and belief.

This trip with Father Bernard is meant to be special: a time for the new priest to engage with some of his new flock, for the parishoners and other guests to visit the shrine, and for God to heal Hanny, the narrator’s disabled brother. Hanny only communicates through objects, and only Smith knows how to translate his language of things. When the boys aren’t in prayer or at meals with the group, they wander out to the coastline known simply as the Loney.

Much of the story juxtaposes the old guard with the new, especially when it comes to the endless comparisons between Father Wilfred and Father Bernard by the matriarch of the Smith family. She is so used to how things had been done for years that she can’t seem to accept that things inevitably change. She is constantly telling Bernard exactly what the previous priest did, and when, and she expects tradition to be obeyed. She’s highly unlikable, from my perspective. While it can be argued that she is just doing what she thinks she needs to protect her fellow parishioners, that she knows how things need to be handled, her self-satisfied smirks make her an unsympathetic character. She “knows” that God will heal her son, even though it hasn’t happened in years previous. She “knows” the exact time when the priest is to lead the visitors in prayer, and where he is to stand. She just knows how everything is meant to be. When the religious pilgrimage happens, and they find the shrine uncared for, she can’t believe that the caretaker would have left it in such a state. When someone mentions that there may not be a caretaker, as shrines aren’t used as much anymore, she is in complete denial. How she treats Hanny, her own son, in this scene, is particularly heartbreaking.

There are times when the narrator discusses his time under Father Wilfred’s guidance as an altar boy, and his perception regarding his mother’s want for him to enter into the clergy when he graduates. One striking feature of Father Wilfred’s personality is his strictness. Given what happens to him during his last trip to the shrine, it makes me wonder about his religiosity from the very beginning. This is also a story of a priest in his seventies who loses his religion, and it terrifies him. With that realization, he tries to save a dead man from being pulled under the waves, finding there is nothing, just nothing. I can’t help but wonder of his strictness was more for himself than his congregation. Was he doubting, and not admitting it to himself, long before that time?

The last quarter of the book switches from the events at the shrine 40 years ago, to the present day. Smith, who abandoned his religion years ago after reading Father Wilfred’s diary, is now seeing a psychiatrist and working as a museum archivist. Hanny can now speak: he has a wife, children, and a career as a priest. Then a child’s remains are discovered during a winter storm on the Loney, and Hanny goes to Smith to try to piece his memories of the past back together.

The Loney is not fast-paced and plot-driven, but is more of an atmospheric, literary horror, although suspense is threaded very well throughout the story. The wet English coastline and small community create the perfect setting for a Gothic novel. The suspicious small town inhabitants and their behavior toward the visitors lends the story the perfect amount of tension. Things meant to frighten people away from certain areas are found in the wetlands, such the silhouette of what looks like a hanging man in the dark of the wetland forest, but turns out to be something else entirely. Horror also lies in relationships between some of the characters. It can also lie in the Catholic symbolism and the relation to various happenings in the novel.

I found this to be a very well written-work. The story was incredibly engaging, and lingers with me. Perhaps that, too, is where some of the horror lies. It haunts you for some time after you finish it.

Hurley won the Costa First Novel Award for The Loney in 2015.

Recommended.

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker


Book Review: Death’s Sweet Echo by Len Maynard and Mick Sims

Death’s Sweet Echo by Len Maynard and Mick Sims

Tickety Boo Press Ltd., 2015

ASIN: B018YK61XM

Available: Kindle edition

Maynard and Sims present thirteen stories, reminiscent of some of the classics. The tone, atmosphere, and themes of these tales of the supernatural are unique to each story, spanning different time periods. A haunted house in an old New England town holds dark secrets; a widow is being followed by someone who claims to be her dead husband; a confused man runs through the rainy streets of London late for a life altering appointment, only to find he was too late anyway.

A few stories stand out. “Another Bite of the Cherry” opens with the frustrated thoughts of an Egyptian girl trapped and immobile in her sarcophagus. who, along with her parents, had been taken and mummified by someone who usurped the position of Pharaoh. The story fast forwards to post-war England. Lizzie Stirling, an out of work actress, has to settle with a job she was once too proud to take, in a nude revue on the small stage. She’s been offered another bite of the cherry, being able to work on the stage again. She makes a few friends, including the leading man of the club’s shows. This friendship turns into more, much more.

“I’m Here” is set after the Great Depression. Poor William Burton lost all of his investment. He reluctantly accepts an invitation to a Christmas party, with a gift he is less than proud of because he has very little disposable income. There are drinks, a lavish meal, and party games, which William dislikes. Then, there are the looks his former love bestows upon her husband, an opportunist who grabbed her up at William’s most difficult time. William, however, finds this all to be an illusion, in a most upsetting way.

In “Sweet Decay of Youth”, Daniel doesn’t want his small group of college friends to abandon him, and he does what he can to ensure his place amongst them. In “Silver”, Maria talks of the silver people in the lake at the Drysdale Clinic, a mental health facility. Her father doesn’t believe her at first, but after the groundskeeper is attacked and the assault is blamed on Maria, things start to fall into place. In the tale called “Guilt Casts Long Shadows”, Martin is wracked with guilt, and he finds out what happens when he doesn’t make proper amends.

Maynard and Sims are true masters of the short horror story. You would be missing out if you skipped over this collection, especially if you like classic horror. They don’t rely on blood and gore to drive their tales. Don’t get me wrong– I love a good, bloody short story myself– but sometimes I like to pick up something that leaves more to the imagination. There really is something appealing to leaving the brain to do some of the heavy lifting, and this book allows for that. Recommended.

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker


Book Review: Aliens/Vampirella by Corinna Beckho, illustrated by Javier Garcia-Miranda


Aliens/Vampirella by Corinna Beckho, illustrated by Javier Garcia-Miranda

Dynamite, 2016

ISBN: 978-1606909911

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, and comiXology ebooks

 

In this graphic novel, the first human colonists on Mars digs into the planet’s soil, only to discover it is an excavation into horror. When they uncover the catacombs of a long-sleeping civilization called the Nosferatu, Vampirella is called to lend her knowledge and abilities to the human colony, although she is looked at with suspicion by the humans. During their venture into the planet, Vampirella and her nearly unwilling allies enter a chamber containing familiar, leathery, pulsing eggs, in the process of hatching. When the crew loses contact with the station above ground, hatred and fear of Vampirella grows on the surface, as the humans overhead think the vampire’s hunger got the better of her….until they learn the truth.

I was very skeptical picking up this comic. Usually I find that merging two franchises together can either be great, or it can be a groan worthy failure. I’m happy to say I found this combination to be creative and well done. Between the artwork and the story, I was entertained from the first page. One of the most interesting parts of this book was seeing the product of a Xenomorph and a vampire. The Xenomorph/vampire hybrid is utterly terrifying.

If you like the Vampirella and Alien franchises, and ever wondered if a crossover could be done, let alone done well, you won’t be disappointed. Recommended.

Contains: blood and gore

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker