Home » Posts tagged "Wol-vriey" (Page 3)

Book Review The Virgin by Wol-vriey

Content warning: unless you have a strong stomach you may want to skip over this review.

 

The Virgin by [Wol-vriey]

The Virgin by Wol-vriey  ( Amazon.com)

Burning Bulb Publishing, 2020

ISBN: 9781948278232

Availability: paperback, Kindle

 

Wol-vriey’s latest effort, The Virgin, is unquestionably his best to date, and also the most likely to offend people; this isn’t the kind of book you want your mother seeing you read.  It’s highly creative and original, but fair warning: it revolves around a reality show where rape is expected of the contestants, although the contestants willingly signed up for the show knowing this.  This is true hardcore, if you can handle that, read on.  If not, don’t bother.

“The Virgin” is a reality TV show broadcast on the “dark web” to whatever sleazy individuals are willing to pay the exorbitant fees to watch it.  It involves five ladies (virgins, obviously) who are placed in a Hollywood style mock-up town somewhere in America.  (if you’ve read Wol-vriey before, you can make a pretty good guess where he put the town)  The ladies have to survive and avoid getting raped for three hours, as there are ten “suitors” in the town trying to track them down for forced sex.  The ladies are not defenseless: each of them is given a choice of one weapon to carry with them, and there are plenty of weapons scattered throughout the town.  That’s one advantage to the ladies: they have some defense in the beginning, while the suitors have none.  Once everyone is in the town, anything goes, and it’s a question of survival.

The plotline itself is quite original. Authors have used reality shows before, but this is truly a new concept, although a sick and twisted one.  If this was just a standard hack and slash, it would have been good, not great.  The other elements Wol-vriey thought of and added in are what push this to the next level, and make for great storytelling.  For example, the money pot for the ladies is $10 million, but the catch is, it has to be split among the ladies that survive and avoid sex.  One person survives intact, she gets the ten million.  Two survive, they each get five.  Three survive…you get the idea.  Not only do the ladies have to contend with the suitors, they have excellent incentive to kill each other off.  There are “safe spaces” built into the show, a few churches where you can take a 15 minute break and not be touched.  To counter that, there are also traps built into many of the buildings, to prevent the contestants from hiding for the duration.  Rats, spiders, rattlesnakes, acid vats…they all make an appearance, keeping the story from becoming a standard kill-fest.

The book contains everything you’ve come to expect from Wol-vriey: gore, graphic sex, and his trademark dark humor that shows up at times.  Example: why is the show three hours long?  If you’ve ever heard a Viagra ad, you know the answer.  The writing is fine and pushes the story along at a brisk clip, but it’s the creativity that sets this one apart from his other efforts, and from most horror stories in general.  Highly recommended, but only for hardcore horror readers who want the limits pushed.  Other readers who prefer tamer material would do best to take a pass on this one.

 

 

Contains: violence, extreme gore, graphic sex, profanity, rape.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

Book Review: EVIL by Wol-vriey

EVIL,  by Wol-vriey

Burning Bulb Publishing, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-9977-7304-0

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

Wol-vriey’s latest, EVIL, reads like a pastiche of 80’s horror films and 70’s creature features: all the elements are there.  Creepy farmhouse in the middle of nowhere?  Check.  Protagonists who do dumb things?  Check.  Freaky monsters from Hell?  Check.  Drinking, drugs, graphic violence and graphic, needless sex?  Check, check, check, and check.   It’s not to say that combining tried and true elements like the above is a bad thing– it can still be fun.  This story is entertaining, but it does feel a little predictable at times.  It’s a decent effort from a splatter-specialist author that his fans will probably enjoy; it just isn’t quite up to the level of his best works.

Ronan Higgins is the classic “farmer in the middle of nowhere”, which, in this case, is western Massachusetts.  When his 19-year-old daughter dies in a farming accident, Fate intervenes in the form of a tall man who appears from nowhere, known as the Bargainer. Ronan cuts a deal with him to get his daughter back, but Ronan’s end of it involves planting special seeds the Bargainer gives him, which need to grow in human flesh.  Lots and lots, of torn up, bloody human flesh.  Ronan conveniently has a large outdoor birthday party planned for his 29-year-old niece Sylvia the next weekend, so there’s your victim supply.  You can guess the rest; it’s a late night drink, drug and sex party, and most of the people are quickly disposed of in messy fashion, either by Ronan or the demons from Hell that show up.   The rest of the story concerns those plucky few survivors who endeavor to avoid becoming exotic fertilizer for the Bargainer and Ronan’s seeds.

This is a nice, simple story with some creative ideas, and enough blood and entrails to keep the gorehounds happy.  There are axes, chainsaws, and someone getting nailed to a pallet while still alive, plus demons burning people to death– enough to satisfy the hardcore readers.  The story moves at a quick pace;  it just feels a bit light and predictable in places.  The demons in the story add a new dimension to the narrative, but they get very minimal page time, and little is given to explaining the Bargainer or his minions.  The characters behave in foolish ways, like they do in any 80’s cinema splatfest, so you can usually predict what’s going to happen to them, which takes away from some of the fun.  The end does toss in a little twist, but overall, the reader will be able to guess what will happen a few pages in advance.  It’s still fun, but the predictability does flatten out the excitement somewhat.

If you liked Wol-vriey’s writing before, EVIL probably won’t change your opinion.  It’s entertaining, but you might feel like it was a good idea that could have been a bit better.  If you haven’t read him before, you might want to start with one of his other books.

 

Contains: graphic violence, graphic sex, drug use, rape.

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

 

Book Review: Brainchew by Wol-vriey

Brainchew by Wol-vriey

Burning Bulb Publishing, 2017

ISBN: 978-0-9977-7304-0

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

With Brainchew, Nigerian horror author Wol-vriey has really hit his stride.  He’s toned down the sometimes excessive levels of blood and pain that could be found in his other horror fiction, created a new monster that fans will enjoy, and kept his dark sense of humor intact.  With Brainchew, he’s created his most memorable creature to date : this is an excellent read, and one that should be on the shelves of any horror fan who delights in campiness and carnage.

The plot: four small-time crooks who specialize in safecracking descend upon eastern Massachusetts with a deal for the “big score.” Their assignment: break into a mansion, crack the safe, steal two specific diamonds, then meet their employer at the Sunflower Motel in Raynham, Massachusetts, for the drop. One of the robbers gets killed during the heist, so his partners dump the body in a Raynham cemetery and then go to the hotel to wait to for the drop.  Unfortunately for them, the hotel owners are sleazebags who have figured out what is going on, and have their own designs on the loot.

Up to that point, the story is pretty standard.  But then it takes a very different turn, and the fun really begins.  Brainchew is a monster that somewhat resembles the creatures from the Alien series, minus the stinging tail.   Awakened from slumber in the cemetery by blood leaking into the ground from the dumped body, Brainchew is hungry for…brains, of course!  Naturally, Brainchew proceeds to the Sunflower Motel to wreak havoc in the goriest method possible, throwing the plans of both the motel owners and the robbers into disarray.

The story moves quickly, without wasting time on lengthy expositions or deep conversations.  There is just enough backstory given on the protagonists to make them seem like more than cardboard cutouts. You might find yourself disliking many of them, as they have few redeeming qualities.  That’s what makes this such fun: you might find yourself rooting for Brainchew as he chews human genital regions, gulps urine, crushes skulls, and flings cranial carnage everywhere.   All of this is done with Wol-vriey’s usual messy intensity, although it is toned down a bit from his previous books.  There’s enough bloodshed to keep gorehound readers happy, but not enough to enter the realm of excess that so many hardcore horror authors today seem to delight in.  The real delight in the book is when Raynham’s residents see Brainchew.  They know who he is already: he is a secret that the town tried to bury years ago.  Their reactions are priceless: it’s not “oh my god, what is THAT?”  but “oh no, that damn thing is awake and at it again!”  It’s nice to have a book where the characters don’t react in the same fashion as usual when a monster is encountered.

Brainchew is a fast, messy, wild ride, with an entertaining and original monster.  The only thing that may put some readers off is the graphic sex does seem excessive at times, and pulls away from the overall story thread.  If you can overlook that, this is a story that most gorehound horror fans will enjoy.  Recommended.

Contains: graphic violence, graphic sex

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson