Home » Posts tagged "occult horror" (Page 8)

Book Review: Birds in the Black Water by Kodie van Dusen

Birds in the Black Water by Kodie Van Dusen

Big Cheese Books, 2022

 ISBN: 978-1-7782271-0-3

Available: Paperback,  Kindle edition ( Amazon.com )

 

Note: contains some spoilers.

Birds in the Black Water by Kodie Van Dusen is a supernatural and psychological thriller. Neviah, a clinical psychologist,  and her younger brother Jaak, are gifted with the ability to inhabit both the real world and the Other Side. The latter is a dangerous, often malevolent, dark version of our world. Neviah and Jaak exist in the interface between the two worlds. Their nightmares, or a troubled person’s touch, can propel them into the Other Side where disturbing memories from their past or the other person’s past emerge. The touch often wounds them. Staying in the Other Side too long can kill them. They aren’t safe even in the real world; koels, resembling giant, black ravens or cuckoos with long tendrils for wings, appear around them, especially when danger is close.

 

 

Neviah’s and Jaak’s gift alienates them from others. Neviah has no close friends and is estranged from her aloof father and deluded mother. Her mother, who was pregnant with Jaak, crashed a truck and horse trailer. Traumatized by the accident, she has become a religious zealot, who dotes on Jaak and is cold to her strange daughter.

 

 

When Jaak succumbs to the Other Side and kills himself. Neviah thinks she could have prevented his death. She decides to become a psychologist and help troubled families. She shares her secrets with her boyfriend Ezra after Jaak’s death. They marry and buy a large farm where Neviah houses and counsels parents and their children. But Ezra is worried when Neviah uses a client’s touch to uncover memories from the Other Side and he sees Neviah’s injuries.

 

 

On a wintry night, a half-frozen, six-year old boy knocks on their cabin door. Gabriel is searching for his mother Martha. Ten years-ago during her psychology apprenticeship, Neviah failed to help a troubled, teenaged Martha escape from her drug-addicted mother and abusive father. Guilt makes Neviah search for Martha, but longing for a child of her own complicates her motives. The threads of the complicated plot come together. Why did Martha abandon her son? Will Neviah’s marriage survive? Will Neviah’s gift and guilt about Jaak’s death destroy her career and even kill her?

 

 

The author, Kodie Van Dusen uses Neviah’s voice to narrate the story. The writing style is straightforward. Van Dusen alternates events in the past and present, but develops the plot clearly. Her description of the Other Side is interesting. Her portrayal of Neviah’s emotions, e.g. her grief and guilt about Jaak’s death is moving.  

 

 

Van Dusen is a clinical psychologist. Her description of the conflict between Neviah’s personal interests and her professional obligations is particularly effective. Her novel is appropriate for and will be enjoyed by teens and adults.

 

Highly recommended

 

Contains: suicide, mild gore

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee

 

 

 

 

 

 

Booklist: Wedding Horror Stories

A lot of wedding proposals happen on Valentine’s Day. A typical online search for “wedding horror stories” turns up stories of terrible things that happened at actual weddings, so it’s not that outlandish to discover that a number of recent horror novels have revolved around weddings.

 

cover art for When The Reckoning Comes by LaTanya McQueen

 

When The Reckoning Comes by LaTanya McQueen

Harper Perennial, 2021

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-0063035041

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

( Bookshop.org  | Amazon.com )

 

Mira’s high school friend Celine invites Mira to her wedding, which will be held at the recently restored plantation where Mira’s ancestor Marceline was enslaved. The ghosts of the enslaved who were murdered during an unsuccessful rebellion return to haunt the wedding, with brutal, bloody results. McQueen does an amazing job recreating Mira’s memories of her childhood friendship with Celine, who is white, and Jesse, a Black boy arrested for murder who is released after Celine intervenes, and of describing the horrific things that were visited on the enslaved people on the plantation. The racism, brutality, and hopelessness are reminders that horror isn’t limited to the supernatural.

 

cover art for Nothing But Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw 

Nothing but Blackened Teeth by Cassandra Khaw

Tor Nightfire, 2021

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250759412

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook ( Bookshop.org | Amazon.com )

 

 

When you are ridiculously wealthy and well-connected, and your fianceé wants her wedding at a Heian-era haunted mansion, with the bones of a bride buried beneath, you make it happen. Wedding guest Cassie, our unreliable narrator, is disconnected and depressed, attending at the request of the groom, who is also her ex. Cassie is one of five people at the wedding: they all have the kind of entangled relationships that emerge from a small group dynamic formed in college, and attempting to summon a spirit in a haunted house the night before the wedding is not going to make it easier to get along. It’s been criticized for purple prose and lack of character development, but it is a wild, and vivid, ride.

 

cover art for The Death of Jane Lawrence by Caitlin Starling

 

The Death of Jane Lawrence by Caitlin Starling

St. Martin’s Press, 2021

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250272584

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

 

Jane approaches Dr. Augustine Lawrence with a proposal of marriage. She wants security and is willing to work hard. They plan for it to be just a business deal: no questions, no love, and never a night spent in Lindridge Hall, his family manor. The best-laid plans can go awry, though: the two of them fall in love. Set in an alternate version of England that has elements of both the Victorian era and post-World War II, this starts out structured as a rather predictable gothic romance and ventured into the territory of occultism, as Jane, trapped in the house with the increasingly paranoid Augustine, is abruptly awakened into a world of magical ritual by occultist friends of Augustine’s. They then leave her to deal with Augustine and whatever is causing the disturbances in the house, untethered to reality. The narrative, which was relatively straightforward until then, became mazelike and hallucinatory.  There’s significant body horror as well as blood and gore, so be warned. Readers who enjoy the version of occultism in this book might also appreciate Polly Schattel’s The Occultists.

 

Book Review: The Condemned by Jesse Rosenbaum

cover art for The Condemned by Jesse Rosenbaum

The Condemned by Jesse Rosenbaum

Fulton Books, 2021

ISBN: 9781649523228

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition  Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com  )

 

The Condemned is an entertaining, although occasionally predictable debut novel from Jesse Rosenbaum.  It’s a decent story and worth reading, although it could have used one more edit to correct the grammatical mistakes that pop up from time to time.

 

The story itself is fun, and puts a few new ideas into the “ordinary guy dealing with angels and demons” plotline.  Michael is your everyday college student who has the misfortune to be visited by Orrix, one of Lucifer’s former high level demon flunkies.  Orrix was banished to Purgatory for insubordination, and he wants to return to Hell to give Lucifer a beating and take over his job.  Orrix gives Michael a choice: help him find an ancient book that will allow him to return to Hell, or Orrix will make Michael’s life miserable.  Not really having a choice, Michael and his friend Tom search for the book so they can get Orrix out of their lives and return to normal.

 

The plotline is solid, and it’s a nice change from the usual good vs. evil.  Instead, it’s “good mixed up with evil” vs. evil, as Lucifer does play a role in the book, and neither he nor Orrix are shining paragons of virtue.   It’s quite fun, with both Lucifer and Orrix making their case for why each should win, since both of them are pathological liars.  The author shows good creativity with the descriptions of the afterlife, and there’s some good imagery.  The upside-down trees growing from the bottom of precipices (complete with bodies hanged from them) are a good example.  The dialogue between the characters fits in nicely and fills in the plot, keeping the story moving at a brisk pace.  For generating reader interest, Orrix and Lucifer steal the show.  Poor Michael seems a bit hapless and somewhat puppet-like, since he really isn’t given much choice in… anything, really.  He’s a likable character, but he should have been given a little more free will: his lack of control over his destiny makes him somewhat one-dimensional.

 

All the good points make for a perfectly good story, but the way the dialogue is written could have used a bit more spit and polish.  It is written in more of a script form, as opposed to a story form.   It’s just dialogue, with no indication of who the speaker is.  It never gets confusing as to who said what, but the style detracts from the emotion of what the characters say.  Of course, it could be a stylistic choice by the author, although it’s one not seen very often in fiction.

 

Overall, it’s a likable first effort from a new author.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson