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Book Review: The Devil Aspect by Craig Russell

The Devil Aspect by Craig Russell

Doubleday Books, 2019

ISBN-13: 978-0385544368

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition

Historical horror can be a fascinating subgenre, if it is done right, but it is a balancing act. The amount of detail for the period often overshadows the atmosphere, with information overloading story and character. When the author successfully balances the elements, the result can result in a treasure.

The Devil Aspect reads like a perfect offspring of The Alienist, Silence of the Lambs, The Exorcist, and Shutter Island.  It is a stunning novel that captures the best of these, yet adds to it a flavor all its own, leaving the reader with a chill that feels like it needs to be washed away.

In the shadows of the rising tide of the Nazi movement in 1935, Czechoslovakia is a dangerous country. Hrad Orlu Asylum for the Criminally Insane exists as a state of the art hospital outside of Prague, but holds a horrific reputation in local lore as having been built on the mouth of hell. When Viktor Kosarek arrives with a new psychiatric approach, the tiny town cringes as they sense the horrors that brew within the stone walls. Viktor believes in “The Devil Aspect,” a method he believes can cure even the world’s most heinous creatures, while Hitler’s crew infects the country in a slow-moving plague, its tendrils snaking inside the walls of the castle to infect some of the staff.

Within the walls themselves exist the Devil’s Six–  The Woodcutter, The Vegetarian, The Clown, The Scionancer, The Glass Cutter, and The Demon, each with a detailed backstory. None can be dealt with without full restraints, and even so, attacks on staff still occur, events that defy logic.

Outside the castle, another murderer is feeding on the citizens of the city: Leather Apron, a Jack The Ripper type serial killer. The suspects can’t recall committing the murders, and swear a shadowy figure is mocking them, forcing them to witness its horrors.  Detective Lucas Smolak scours the streets for clues, and grows frustrated as every clue leads to a darker truth. He senses a connection to the legends around him, yet holds onto the assertion nothing is supernatural in these crimes.

How the two storylines intertwine is brilliant, as are the characters. Smolak and Kosarek are imperfect, both committing errors that could end more lives as their humanity holds them back from achieving their goals.

Russell’s novel is one of those rare entities that is intelligent yet readable, full of historical accuracies and folklore but somehow still relatable, and scary as the hell that may exist beneath the castle. What brings the story success is the ambiguity of the horror. Russell keeps the supernatural aspect on the periphery of the reader’s psyche. He plays his cards close and the revelation of which evil is worse, human or demonic, burrows beneath the skin as the mysteries begin to unravel.

The reader must wrestle the secrets away from the characters with each alternating chapter, the clues muddy yet fitting together. The story’s serpentine descent into madness is a challenge that is worth the effort.

A highly recommended novel for the new year that will linger long after the final page is closed.

 

Reviewed by Dave Simms

 

 

Book Review: Hunger Moon by Alexandra Sokoloff

Hunger Moon (Huntress/FBI Thrillers #5) Series) by Alexandra Sokoloff

Thomas & Mercer, 2017

ISBN-13: 978-1503942721

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, MP3 CD

Alexandra Sokoloff has never strayed away from the controversial in her work, either in her Stoker-nominated horror titles or in her Huntress series. Hunger Moon is the fifth book in the series, and plenty has been written about it already: it will be easy for the reader to figure out why, once the final page is turned.

The concept of a female serial killer was a unique one when the Huntress series began. The first book, Huntress Moon,  is a stellar novel that introduced something new to the field of crime fiction that left an impact close to the one chewed out by Hannibal Lecter.

Cara Lingstrom is the killer readers crave in stories. Nothing about her is simple, nothing is easy, and her motivations dive deeper than the typical sociopath/family issues/revenge stories. Sokoloff draws her in deft strokes, creating a character both brutal and sympathetic, surgical in mission yet human beneath the murders.

In Hunger Moon,  Cara has disappeared from FBI Special Agent Matthew Roarke’s radar. Something evil is happening on college campuses nationwide. Rapes are increasing everywhere, and rapists are being targeted by a mysterious killer who leaves Santa Muerte symbols behind. When the country’s leaders prove to be no different that the rapists targeted by the killer, a fury erupts, dividing the nation. It’s a situation that, unfortunately, too many readers will find familiar. Cara is in hiding, planning something that will shake up the novel, and Roarke, hot on the heels of the men she is chasing, knows she is just a step away.

Hunger Moon is a white-knuckle ride by a talented thriller author, tackling a subject that needs to be addressed more, both in fiction and in real life. Reading the others in the series is not necessary at all but highly recommended. A thriller series this strong doesn’t come around often.

Book Review: The Naturalist by Andrew Mayne

The Naturalist (The Naturalist Series Book One) by Andrew Mayne

Thomas & Mercer, Seattle, 2017

ISBN-13: 9781477824245

Available: Paperback/Kindle ebook

 

The Naturalist is a mystery and thriller about a serial killer.  But, is the killer an animal or a human?

 

Theo Cray, a professor of bioinformatics (biology and computer science) is in a remote town in Montana, when a young woman, a former student of his, is found mauled nearby.  Cray has an unusual approach to research.  He uses his knowledge of biology, skills in computer science and a unique imagination to look for unexpected patterns in nature, such as the behavior of frogs and large apex predators.

 

The local law authorities at first suspect that Cray is the killer, but soon decide that a rogue grizzly bear is responsible.  But Cray’s knowledge of bear behavior tells him that they are wrong, and that a human made the killing look like an animal attack.  What’s more, he finds a report of a young woman who was similarly mauled nearby 6 years ago.  He suspects that these are not the killer’s first murders.

 

Cray created an artificial intelligence computer program for his research.  It can analyze reams of seemingly unrelated data to reveal the probabilities that underlying patterns exist.  Cray enters data about missing persons and population.  He finds that Montana and Wyoming are among the states with the highest number of missing persons per capita.  He filters the data for young women and interstate highways.  The program identifies possible patterns around certain highways, not unlike the feeding circuits of great white sharks.

 

Using this information Cray investigates the cases of missing young women in the area.  When he finds evidence that some were not run-aways, but might have been murdered, the authorities come after Cray again.  For Cray, it’s now a race between avoiding the law and a finding serial killer, who has murdered over a hundred persons over two decades and is coming for him.

 

Mayne does a good job drawing in the reader as Cray systematically works through the many steps in identifying the killer.  The pace of the plot is steady and fast, and the characters are appropriately sympathetic or chilling. Highly recommended.

 

Contains: moderate gore.

Reviewed By Robert D. Yee