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Book Review: Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands by Chris Bohjalian


Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands by Chris Bohjalian

Doubleday, 2014

ISBN-13: 978-0385534833

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edtion, audio CD, Audible.com audio

 

After a nuclear reactor meltdown near her home in northeastern Vermont kills her family, troubled teen Emily Shepard is doing her best to disappear. The disjointed narrative of Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands is her story, told in bits and pieces, moving backward, forward, and sideways in time. Her memories of her parents, both good and bad; her time as a troubled teen; her journey from home to Burlington, Vermont; and her downward slide as a homeless teen fill up more than half the book. The rest is centered on her relationship with Cameron, a nine year old runaway, and her eventual trip back to where it all began.

Taking place in the aftermath of a nuclear explosion, I was surprised at how untouched the people around Emily seemed. Outside the “exclusion zone” near the event, there doesn’t seem to be the kind of panic or outrage you would expect nearby, or with refugees flooding in. They come, and then they’re gone. The environmental damage is localized, so once Emily reaches Burlington, there isn’t any imminent danger. It’s an apocalyptic story without much of the impact of the apocalypse visible to the reader, at least as we see through Emily’s eyes.

Emily herself is a perceptive writer with a love of Emily Dickinson, but as she tells her story, she’s oddly detached (not surprisingly, though, as it’s a reasonable strategy for dealing with grief when your priority is survival). While it’s understandable that she wouldn’t want to go into details of some of her experiences, it leaves strangely shaped gaps in our understanding of her. Emily lives through horrifying events and goes to some very dark places, both physically and emotionally, but while I couldn’t put this down, it’s more of a testament to Bohjalian’s skill in pulling me along than any sympathy I felt for her.

The ending is fairly predictable, with Emily returning home for closure and developing radiation sickness– it is the journey that kept me going. I wanted to know what happened next, to fill in the blanks of Emily’s story, and had to keep reading to find out if she would fill those in, and how. Bohjalian got a physical reaction out of me with his descriptions of Emily’s cutting and her encounters as a prostitute, and he certainly kept me going, but Emily herself, and the novel as a whole, were unconvincing to me. It just never seemed quite real.

I am a huge fan of Bohjalian’s The Night Strangers, so I know he’s capable of building atmosphere and doing detailed world-building, and Close Your Eyes, Hold Hands, while it kept me reading, does not measure up to it. The idea is great, but this isn’t his best work, and for creepiness and character building, it does not measure up to The Night Strangers. As he’s a fairly well-known mainstream author, and it’s overall a well written book, it’s worth it to have it in libraries, but horror readers may not want to put it at the top of their list. Recommended.

Contains: violence, sexual situations

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

New Resources: The Genre Blender (and some ghost stories)

Click here to visit the Genre Blender

So many stories cross genre boundaries, and are missed by readers of one genre or the other, when both might discover some new world or a previously unknown (to them) novel. That’s really a shame. A lot of quality fiction (and a lot of entertaining mindless reading as well) gets passed up by readers who would probably enjoy it.

Soooo… I am thrilled to be able to say that librarian Megan McArdle has taken the time to create a “genre blender” Yes, that is exactly what it is. Choose two genres, click on the blender, and get a list of books that might suit your reading habits (this doesn’t mean they’re identical– you still have to search through them to find which ones might be right for you– but it’s a great starting point and gives you a way to add to your TBR list.

Megan has a book coming out this fall on genre blends, as you can see above. Even if you don’t purchase it (and like most ALA editions, I’m guessing it doesn’t come cheap), I’m betting that her blog, Genrify, which is where the Genre Blender is located, will be updated with new titles over time, so if you read genre blends like historical horror or urban fantasy, it definitely will be worth checking out. Go play!

Postscript: I like her list of ghost stories, which you can find here, but she left off Chris Bohjalian’s The Night Strangers. What else would you add to that list?

Booklist: Basement Nightmares

The basement from Cabin in the Woods

Basements are creepy. Underground, dark, leaky, moldy, musty-smelling, and full of miscellaneous junk, they’ have the potential to house and hide many horrors and obsessions. Our own basement has been all of those things, and we have been trying to reclaim it for the past six months. Leaky foundations led to mold, then mold remediation and waterproofing. An exploding pipe led to replacing drywall, painting the walls, reclaiming furniture, installing electrical lights (yes, there were no electrical lights) and recarpeting the entire thing. Which meant packing up all the junk and having the furniture moved into storage while the carpet was replaced. Let me tell you, you don’t know what you actually have until you empty out your closets and drawers.

Yesterday our new carpet was finally installed (it’s beautiful), and today all of our stuff was moved back in. It looks like we’ve resolved the dark, leaky, moldy, and musty-smelling issues, although there’s nothing we can do about the underground part, and there seem to be a lot of boxes labeled “miscellaneous” or “random stuff”. You can’t have it all, I guess. In honor of the six month long basement nightmare that now appears to be almost at an end, I have for you a list of books with basements in them that are sure to give you nightmares, too. Myself, I am looking forward to finally getting some peaceful sleep.

 

The Night Strangers by Chris Bohjalian

Airline pilot Chip Linton’s jet crashes into the Hudson River, with virtually no survivors. Guilt-ridden, he moves to a crumbling Victorian house in rural New Hampshire. While he works on remodeling the house, he discovers human bones in the basement, and the murderous ghosts of his passengers from Flight 1611 begin haunting him and demanding that he provide them company.  This is a creepy and chilling story, especially, I think, if you are a parent.

 

 The Amityville Horror by Jay Anson

The Amityville Horror is supposed to be based on a true story. George and Kathleen Lutz moved into a luxurious house in Long Island knowing that brutal murders had taken place there the previous year. Twenty-eight days later, they fled, leaving all their possessions behind. Horror fans are probably familiar with the story already– if they haven’t read the book, they probably have seen the movie. Put this in your next “if you liked the movie, try the book” display, and see what happens.

 

 The Girl Next Door by Jack Ketchum

This novel is based on the events of the Sylvia Likens murder. After their parents are killed, Meg Loughlin and her sister Sarah move in with their aunt and cousins. The girls’ aunt turns on them, eventually locking Meg in the basement. Meg’s aunt draws the neighborhood children into participating in her insanity, making them complicit in Meg’s torture and debasement. Graphic, explicit and horrific, The Girl Next Door is an extremely disturbing exploration of human evil. The Girl Next Door is a horror classic, but definitely not for the faint of heart. The Girl Next Door has also been made into a movie.

 

 The Siience of the Lambs by Thomas Harris

I have to admit that I have not actually read Silence of the Lambs, but I was at an impressionable age when I first saw the movie, and Buffalo Bill’s basement is permanently imprinted in my brain. According to this article, Buffalo Bill’s basement was modeled on a real serial killer’s basement torture chamber. All these novels based on true stories make me reluctant to ever go into any basement but my own.

 

The Road by Cormac McCarthy

This bleak novel about a father and son traveling through a post-apocalyptic landscape includes a house with a basement butcher shop where people are imprisoned and dismembered by the cannibal inhabitants.  I feel ill just writing that down. Mold and moisture aren’t seeming like such a big deal now.

 

Now that our basement has lights, dry walls and floors, and new carpet, I don’t think we’ll have to lose sleep over it anymore. But stories about basements like these certainly put it all into perspective!