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Book Review: Rose by Rami Ungar

Rose by Rami Ungar

Castrum Press, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-1912327430

Available: Paperback, Kindle Edition

 

Rose wakes alone from a deep sleep, disoriented, unable to remember most of the past two years, and, in a horrific discovery, discovers she is part plant. She is soon joined by Paris, who tells her he is her fiance, and saved her from a stalker who had fatally harmed her by taking her to his greenhouse and casting a Japanese spell on her that saved her life but appears to have gone somewhat awry. Since it’s winter, and freezing outside, as a plant she is trapped in his greenhouse and connecting apartment with no choice but to trust that he is telling her the truth, although observations of his behavior show that he can be disturbingly erratic and possessive.  Despite her memory loss, Rose’s character hasn’t changed, and she finds it difficult to believe that she would have willingly agreed to marry Paris. A search of his apartment one day when he is out leads to the discovery of a secret diary (in Dutch, a language Rose happens to know) as well as his Japanese spellbook. The diary details Paris’s relationship with Rose, but something about it doesn’t seem right. When Paris’ father breaks into the apartment and discovers Rose, he is shocked, because it has been in the news that Rose was kidnapped and her fiance was killed by a stranger who violently attacked them. The two of are caught and dragged away on a cross-country journey where neither of them knows what might happen next, except that it won’t be good.

Paris reveals that his actions toward the women who reject him and their lovers stem from a traumatic incident that occurred when his father sent him to a camp that promised to “make him into a man”.  He has learned to command spells from the Japanese spellbook that give him the ability to take what he wants, control other people, and torture and kill people, and intends to use these on Rose and his father.  However, a cruel, mischief-making Japanese demon controls the spellbook, and after enough mayhem ensues, gives Rose an opportunity to end Paris’ cruelty and madness and save herself… at a price.

The first half of this book is creepy because the reader is getting only Rose’s perspective, and with her trauma and amnesia she is not a reliable narrator. In addition, only the least observant of readers will miss the way Paris gaslights and terrorizes Rose, while at the same time expressing his adoration for her. The setup screams “abusive, violent scenario” and watching Rose come around to this understanding is kind of like watching a trainwreck in slow motion. There’s also some pretty strong and heavy-handed foreshadowing about societal expectations of boys and men and the unintended consequences of toxic masculinity and bullying, which Paris claims is the origin of his behavior.  The second part is where Ungar’s fantastical imagination of ways to torment people comes into its own (although I’m curious about his idea to use of acupuncture needles to cause pain, since they’re supposed to awaken self-healing and cause soreness at the most). He does not shy away from describing the impact of Paris’ spells and insanity. I don’t think I will ever get the vivid descriptions of tormented trees out of my head. One thing I found particularly disturbing was that Paris used a spell on the young teenage sisters of the women he tortured to make them fall in love with him, assist in torturing their siblings, and become his willing sexual slaves (this isn’t graphically depicted, but what you do see is bad enough).

Rose is supposed to be a tale of the supernatural, but with the exception of the protagonist, the supernatural aspect takes a backseat to the human antagonist and his agenda for almost all of the book. And for most of the book, the supernatural terrors are more of an enhancement of the methods and agenda of the villain, rather than the main force driving the story. The ending is pretty close to being a deus ex machina, and left me feeling unsatisfied. However, I did like the character of Rose and her resilience in spite of baffling and frightening circumstances, and I feel like the book successfully spotlighted the damage gaslighting and toxic masculinity can have on individuals trapped by circumstance and those they touch. Ungar successfully evinced feelings of dread in this reader, and while readers of extreme horror probably won’t be fazed, it was more than gruesome and stomach-turning enough for me.

It isn’t often that a novel with a sentient plant as narrator comes along, so Rose is worth checking out just to see what Ungar did with the concept. And although I found the ending somewhat unsatisfying, the journey there with Rose was worth taking.

 

Book Review: Terminal by Michaelbrent Collings

Terminal by Michaelbrent Collings
Independently published, 2019
ISBN-13: 978-1091873315
Available: Paperback and Kindle edition

The fog rolls in around an isolated bus terminal, and the eleven people inside are cut off from all communication with the outside world. Although the reader knows something is watching outside, reading about the events and characters in the terminal is almost as disorienting as it must be to the characters inside, who know nothing at all. This leads to a slow beginning, as complete strangers have to meet and work out what is going on before the pace can pick up. Once it does, though, the story is gripping. A cryptic message flashed to all of them tells them that unless they can choose one person unanimously to live, everyone will die. A second message, much later, offers this food for thought:  not just who most deserves to live, but who deserves to die. With the lights dimming and no way out, the group deduces that they have been trapped by alien creatures as part of a deadly experiment in human behavior.

Most of the group are strangers, although a few have a connection. In their midst are a drug dealer, an addict, a con man, a thief, a cutter, a Mary Kay saleslady, a pair of newlyweds, a grandmother, a gangbanger, a diabetic, a cop, a ticket taker (named Mary Holiday– really), a mother and daughter, and a neurodiverse computer expert named Adam S. Miles, who is referred to by his full name through the entire book. Some of these individuals have dangerous secrets, others’ are more mundane. Collings takes time with a few of the characters to show them more fully: Paul Kingsley, a cop determined not to kill; Mary Holiday, who has spent her entire life trying to make sure her daughter has a better one; Adam S. Miles, who is underestimated at the start but makes the majority of deductions and information dumps in the book; and Shelly Sherman, a Mary Kay consultant with a hidden past. Others have stories that have to be pieced together from various interactions, such as Bella Ricci and Jesus Flores, and a few are just sketched in briefly, so you don’t really have time to feel the impact when they die. I truly wasn’t sure how things were going to play out, and who was going to survive, and Collings totally blew me away with his ending,

There are a few things that really stick out in all of this. First, Collings’ handling and development of his autistic character, Adam S. Miles felt pretty respectful. It is rare to have a character with any kind of disability allowed to speak for themselves or presented as capable and independent. Yet, while other characters used ableist language to put him down, Adam S. Miles spoke up for himself. Collings also managed to avoid other disability tropes, such as making Adam an “inspirational”, “magical”, or “pitiful” character, all common stereotypes. I did feel like the upfront information on ableism and neurodiversity, while admirable, occasionally disrupted the flow of the writing. I think Collings relied on common stereotypes and tropes in developing some of his other characters (not especially surprising when he had to kill off 11 people in 327 pages) but I appreciated the care he put into Adam’s character.

Adam is also responsible for taking over a conversation about whether aliens could be responsible for the situation the characters find themselves in, listing multiple horrific experiments that humans have conducted on each other (I do want to note that while many of the examples Adam lists did occur, the summary of the Los Angeles vaccine study was misleading) to explain why aliens might do the same. I feel like this is a place where Collings is trying to hit home his message hard, of the horrors people, even ordinary people, will do to each other, simply because they can. It’s a little heavy-handed, but you’ll be right there with the people in the terminal as they beg him to stop listing off the cruelties people have inflicted on one another.  It’s shortly after this, as the deadline by which they must make their choice looms closer,  that the plot starts really speeding along, and the deaths start piling up.

As the story in the terminal ends, the survivor, who is typically herded into the next experimental location, short-circuits the experiment unexpectedly, and the creatures running it are left waiting for orders.  Will the experimenting end? Collings exposes the true horror of what it means for humans to be subjects in a cruel experiment run by an all-powerful authority.  Recommended.

Graphic Novel Review: Jenny Finn by Mike Mignola and Troy Nixey, art by Troy Nixey and Farel Dalrymple

Jenny Finn by Mike Mignola and Troy Nixey, art by Troy Nixey and Farel Dalrymple

Dark Horse, 2018

ISBN: 9781427606754

Available: hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, comiXology edition

A mysterious girl, Jenny Finn, arrives in Victorian England and leaves death, destruction, and a strange curse in her wake. There is a plague causing gruesome lesions in the crooked streets of London. Joe, a slaughterhouse worker, aims to find out what’s going on in his city. When the pursuit of his investigation leads him to Jenny, Joe is attacked by a religious zealot named Hornsbee who attempts to kill her, and has a number of strange and disturbing encounters: a serial murderer bent on wiping out the “ladies of the night” is loose, the ghosts of the murdered women roam the streets, and mutated half-human, half-fish people devote themselves to Jenny Finn. Pippa Platt, who clearly loves the oblivious Joe, takes him to a séance to see if a group of spiritualists can help him track down Jenny and what is happening in the town.

I liked this story for several reasons. The Lovecraftian tone and the Victorian setting were essential elements for this kind of tale. The griminess of old London and themes of punishment, forgiveness, and doom are exactly what I like in my horror. The art for this volume fits with the story well. Sequential art that includes body horror has always been a draw for me. The hybrid humans in particular are interesting in these pages.

While Jenny Finn does not compare to the Hellboy mythos, it is an interesting tale with great artwork. If you enjoy Lovecraftian tones, Victorian settings, and body horror, this would make a nice addition to your collection.

Recommended

Contains: body horror, nudity, implied rape, sex

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker