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Book Review: Foul is Fair by Hannah Capin

Foul is Fair by Hannah Capin

Wednesday Books, 2020

ISBN-13: 978-1250239549

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

 

Sixteen year old Elle and her friends Jenny, Summer, and Mads, are glamorous, vicious, daughters of the ultra-rich whose parents have given them a lot of freedom, When the four girls crash a party for the lacrosse team for the elite prep school, St. Andrews, what starts out as fun becomes a lot less so as the girls are separated and most of the lacrosse team colludes in drugging and raping Elle.

But this is not the story of Elle as either a victim or a survivor. This is the story of how Elle plans to kill off every member of the lacrosse team who had any kind of involvement in orchestrating or participating in her rape, backed by her friends, or “coven”.  As she looks at a photo of the St. Andrews lacrosse team, she spots one boy who was not involved, and decides she’s going to manipulate him into killing his teammates.  Cutting and dyeing her hair, she transfers to St. Andrews to get close to her future victims, and especially, to get close to Mack, the player who didn’t take part, so she can convince him that knocking off his teammates is the right thing to do, and set him up as the fall guy. Even falling in love with him– and she thinks she might be falling in love with him– isn’t enough to take her mind and her heart off vengeance.

Foul and Fair takes its inspiration from Shakespeare’s Macbeth, positioning Elle’s friends as the three witches, Elle as Lady Macbeth, and Mack as Macbeth. Rather than convincing him to kill out of ambition, though, Elle convinces him he is killing out of righteousness.  Elle’s murderous anger slashes through the book.

Unfortunately, the scenario of entitled, rich, white guys raping a girl at a party without having to face consequences isn’t an unrealistic one, and certainly Elle’s feelings, and the bonds of her friendships, are strong. But the likelihood of the girls getting away with tormenting and setting up the members of the lacrosse team, especially without getting caught, is something the reader really has to buy into, as is the likelihood of Elle convincing a guy she’s known less than a week to kill his best friend.

Elle is not a sympathetic character (neither is Lady Macbeth, to be fair) although we get to see a few heroic moments in flashbacks to the beginnings of the four girls’ friendships, like her defense of Mads, a trans girl, on the day Mads outed herself at school (Mads is a great character who doesn’t get enough time, and Capin writes her wonderfully). Whatever else they are, Elle and her “coven” have each other’s backs. These four girls, and the way they’re described, although poetic, reveals that they are a pretty terrifying bunch. I’m doubtful that this will appeal to boys, even though it does a pretty good job of laying out the complicity of even those who aren’t directly involved, and they’re the ones who need to see that. But readers looking for a revenge fantasy with sharp teeth won’t be disappointed. Recommended.

Contains: flashbacks to rape, sexual assault, abusive behaviors, bullying, transphobic bullying, brief depictions of suicide, substance abuse, cursing, violence, gore, murder.

Book Review: Hellrider by JG Faherty

Hellrider by JG Faherty

Flame Tree Press, August 2019

ISBN: 978-1-78758-262-0

Availability: hardcover, paperback, ebook

 

Hellrider is a hell of a ride through the murderous revenge spree of 19 year old Eddie Ryder, a former biker gang member.  He tried to walk the straight and narrow path, but is burned alive in his own auto repair garage by his former gang members as payback for ratting out the gang leader.  Instead of a one-way ticket to the afterlife, Eddie finds himself as a spirit tied to his hometown, although being dead has given him some very special powers.  Needless to say, he has one thing on his mind: paying back all the gang members who helped to kill him, in as painful a fashion as possible.  The story become a whirlwind of beatings, stabbings, shootings, and explosions as Eddie thrashes his way through the town, destroying anyone who ever wronged him, or he perceives to have wronged him.  In between the havoc he wreaks, he makes a bit of an effort to help out the dying mother and sixteen year old brother he left behind, but his primary focus is revenge and mayhem.

 

The book starts off fast, and keeps the throttle wide open until the last of its 278 pages.  Eddie is killed within the first 20 pages, so there’s plenty of time for him to kill and maim.  If this had been just another story about a ghost killing the wrongdoers, it probably would have been a mid-level book in terms of quality.  Thankfully, it’s much more fun than a paint-by-numbers vengeance story.  Eddie has the power to jump into any body (male or female) and possess the person, making them do what he wants.  That’s where the creativity takes flight in this story.  Eddie doesn’t just take over a body and make the person kill himself or herself; he often wants to humiliate them before killing them, and he also takes great delight in scaring them by leaving little messages letting them know who’s responsible.  Whether he’s cutting off someone’s penis, making a tough biker appear like a lovesick puppy in front of people, or simply beating someone to death, Eddie is a creative as well as violent spirit, and it helps keep the book interesting.  You never know what he’s going to do next. He does have the limitation of not being able to move past the town lines, so he has to get inventive to trap one of his victims, who is in jail a few towns away.  This makes the character more interesting–  he can’t just do anything he wants and ignore the consequences.

 

As Eddie grows in his powers and becomes less discriminating about whom he kills, the other characters help flesh out the rest of the story and keep it from becoming one-dimensional.  Eddie’s younger brother Carson is the secondary focus, as he and his girl Kelli realize that despite family ties, Eddie has gone off the deep end and has to be stopped before he destroys the entire town.  Carson is a caring, intelligent bookworm– the complete opposite of Eddie– and he provides a nice contrast in character development.   All of the personalities in the book are well-drawn, and the few moments where Eddie shows some humanity towards his family add some shades of gray to an otherwise dark character.

 

Hellrider succeeds in its intention of providing a rip-snorting, 200 MPH thrill ride of a story that hits as hard as a power chord from the heavy metal music Eddie loves.  It’s a horror/thriller novel that should appeal to a wide audience, and is worth the purchase.  As Eddie Ryder himself might say, UP THE IRONS! Recommended.

Contains:  graphic violence, sex

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson