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Book Review: Midnight on Beacon Street by Emily Ruth Verona

cover art for Midnight on Beacon Street by Emily Ruth Verona

Midnight on Beacon Street by Emily Ruth Verona

Harper Perennial, 2024

ISBN: 9780063330511

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

Buy:  Bookshop.orgAmazon.com

 

Midnight on Beacon Street has a fantastic first chapter, Seen through the eyes of six year old Ben, it starts just after midnight, and we immediately know something has gone terribly, violently, wrong. But there’s no clue as to what actually happened, who did it, or who it happened to. Emily Ruth Verona forces us to backtrack to the early evening arrival of Amy, the babysitter, to find out. Ben and Amy, the point-of-view characters, alternate chapters, with overlapping time frames that give us their differing views of the same events. Amy, the protagonist, suffers from anxiety, and we get some background on her own experience with a babysitter who helped her develop a way to cope with it. The back-and-forth on the timeline is a cool storytelling technique, but there’s so much jumping around that it messed with the narrative for me, as I was constantly having to flip around to figure out the linear sequence of events.

 

It’s 1993, and in the suburban community of Chase Hills, there have been a rash of burglaries. Amy shows up for her regular Friday night  babysitting job, watching hostile preteen Mira and her younger brother Ben while their mother is out on a date, She is expecting a relatively calm evening of games and stories until the kids go to bed, and then a cuddle with her boyfriend Miles over while they watch Halloween (horror movies are a way for her to deal with her anxiety, although Halloween is an interesting choice to take on a babysitting job).. Miles is not a fan of horror, but their debate over whether to watch it is interrupted when MIles’ obnoxious older brother Patrick, his girlfriend Sadie (Amy’s former babysitter), and Sadie’s sister Tess, who demanded a ride from Miles after their car broke down, push their way in and refuse to leave. It’s creepy, and I was so angry that Miles put her in that situation, even if it wasn’t on purpose. Amy tries to keep them away from her charges, but her anxiety makes it difficult to manage the older teens and also make sure the kids are safe. She finally draws the line, and Patrick, Sadie, and Tess leave in Miles’ car, leaving the two of them together.  Amy is so angry that she tells Miles to leave, and because the others have taken his car, she gives him her keys so he can drive her car home.

 

Meanwhile Mira and Ben are upstairs when the phone rings. They are never supposed to answer the phone when it rings but Ben answers and then Mira hangs the phone up, angry.

 

It’s apparently visiting night because a neighbor drops by next to drop off a letter, Then there’s another knock, and Amy(failing to follow basic rules for surviving a horror movie) opens the door to a strange man demanding to see his children. The single mother she’s sitting for has finally been tracked down by her abusive ex-husband, and he wants his kids right away. Amy tries to keep him out and protect Ben, and Mira and Amy together finally threaten him into leaving. It’s a lot scarier of a scene than that description makes it sound.

 

With Mira and Ben both safely upstairs again, Amy cleans up from the busy night only to hear a noise from the kitchen. Sadie is in the kitchen carving her initials into the baseball bat Amy threatened the kids’ father with, using a steak knife, believing Amy had left because her car is no longer there.  There have been several flashbacks in the book to the time when Sadie was Amy’s “cool big sis” babysitter. Now that Sadie is more of a peer, their past has created an unevenness to their relationship . Sadie admits she is the burglar in the news, but  it’s unclear exactly what her purpose is at this point– whether she’s there to steal something, create some other minor mischief, or do something really awful–, and we never really find out because Ben, who’s supposed to be asleep, comes into the kitchen looking for a glass of milk, and things spin out of control fast.

 

Verona has anxiety herself. She waited a long time to be able to write a character with anxiety realistically and with depth, and I think she succeeded with that. Amy does freeze up but she also has some agency and when it comes down to it she acts to protect herself and the kids. I also liked that she expressed her feelings to Miles and he respected her. As much of a pushover as he was for the older kids, his treatment of Amy felt almost too good to be true for an awkward teenage boy.

 

This does feel like a book where “things just happen”:: I can’t imagine all of these seemingly unrelated events occurring in one evening (although they do all end up contributing to the finale) and Sadie’s motives remain a mystery to me. It’s good that Amy had the opportunity to define herself and discover she could handle fear outside a movie screen, but as a parent, I wouldn’t be asking her back to watch my kids. Recommended.

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

Book Review: Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher

 

Nettle & Bone by T. Kingfisher

Tor, 2023

ISBN-13 ‎978-125024404

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook.

Buy: Bookshop.org  | Amazon.com

 

There is a thin line between fantasy and horror, and between YA and adult fiction. Nettle and Bone dances on that line in this dark fairytale by T. Kingfisher, closer in tone to The Seventh Bride than The Hollow Places.

 

Marra is the youngest of three sisters, princesses of the Harbor Kingdom, which is surrounded on both sides by more powerful kingdoms. Her oldest sister Damia died after a suspiciously short marriage to the cruel Prince Vorling, and now her middle sister, Kania, must marry him and bear him an heir. Vorling’s heir will receive a blessing from the royal family’s fairy godmother that no foreign enemy can harm them with magic, but their lives are bound to the godmother’s just as she is bound to their family.

 

Marra is hidden away at a convent where she stays for ten years, until a visit to her sister convinces her that Kania must be freed from her abusive husband. She goes to the dust-wife, a witch skilled in necromancy, who owns a demon chicken, to ask for help, and accomplishes three impossible tasks the dust-wife sets her, including spinning, weaving, and sewing a cloak of nettle wool and bringing a dog made of bones to life. In completing the tasks. the dust-wife’s promise forces her to help Marra on her quest. They visit a goblin market to find what they need to succeed, which turns out to be a disgraced warrior, Fenris, who was trapped in a fairy fort. They then find Marra’s own fairy godmother, who turns out to be better at cursing than blessing, to her shame. They all must go into the catacombs under Vorling’s castle, where old kings are laid to rest, so the dust-wife can raise the king who bound the royal family’s godmother(essentially a prisoner) and force him to release her, Marra’s fairy godmother can take her place, and Fenris can kill the king.

 

I appreciated the imperfections in the characters and in the relationship between Kania and Marra that made them interesting and unique. Fairytale characters are usually flat and the storylines formulaic, but Kingfisher subverts expectations with fleshed-out characters and  plot elements that bring the unpredictable into play using familiar structures. As it just won the Hugo and Nebula Awards for best novel, I am clearly not the only one to recognize that this book is really something special. Highly recommended.

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

Graphic Novel Review: The EC Archives: Terror Illustrated edited by Daniel Chabon, original series editor William M. Gaines

Cover art for EC Archives: Terror Illustrated

The EC Archives: Terror Illustrated edited by Daniel Chabon, original series editor William M. Gaines

Dark Horse, 2022

ISBN-13: 9781506719788

Available: Kindle edition, hardcover ( Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

 

The EC Archives: Terror Illustrated includes illustrated prose stories of terror, murder, and the supernatural with works by Al Feldstein (also writing under Alfred E. Neuman), Jack Davis, Joe Orlando, Johnny Craig, and more! This collection also features the never printed third issue, and a foreword by Mick Garris. The book, advertised as “Picto-Fiction,” contains illustrated stories rather than a traditional comic.

 

I’m going to start out this review with the negative. There are some problematic stories in this volume, the worst of them being “Mother Love” by Maxwell Williams and illustrated by Charles Sultan, and “The Long Wait” by Alfred E. Neuman and illustrated by Johnny Craig. In “Mother Love,” Leona’s father sells her to a brute named Clint as a bride. She is endlessly abused and tormented, and rape is alluded to in this story. She is described as no smarter than a toddler, and lines like “Not that Leona thought of her life as a horror. Her mind was not capable of that” made this hard to get through. It gets worse. Clint discovers she is pregnant, and after he beats and abuses her further, he devises a plan where he would abandon her at the hospital. I don’t often ruin the end of the story in my reviews, but I will here. She eventually escapes the hospital and returns to the cabin, with her stillborn baby in a jar, and kills Clint. When the police arrive, nothing is done to try to figure out why what happened, happened. An abused woman is arrested for killing her abuser. This story is problematic on so many levels. 

 

In “The Long Wait” by Alfred E. Neuman, illustrated by Johnny Craig, Red Buckley murders his boss, plantation owner Emil Duval. As can be expected when a plantation is mentioned, you can bet there are racist depictions of Black “workers” Kulu approaches the main house and says “Kulu wanna be house-boy. Kulu wanna be servant.” Yikes. You think Buckley gets his comeuppance in the end…but it still reveals a racially insensitive reason that it occurs. 

 

This is not to say there are not some gems in this volume. There are some good stories here. The first story in issue 1, “The Sucker”, by Maxwell Williams and illustrated by Reed Crandall, is told in second person: you are on the run when you meet a beautiful dame who cheats and robs you, and the only thing you can do every night is kill her…again…and again…and again. In “Halloween”, by Alfred Feldstein and illustrated by Reed Crandall, Ann Dennis is hired as the matron of Briarwood Orphan Asylum by the headmaster, Eban Critchet. She does her best to improve the lives of the orphans in her care, but when she discovers what the headmaster has been doing, she takes matters into her own hands, and the children aren’t far behind. “The Gorilla’s Paw”,  by Alfred E. Neuman and illustrated by Johnny Craig is a violent and brutal retelling of the classic “Monkey’s Paw” tale. After a man is convinced he must purchase a mummified gorilla’s paw from a curio shop, he is plagued by nightmares and wishes he had never bought it, then awakens to find the paw holding the amount of money he paid for the paw. When he discovers the secret of the paw, he keeps on wishing, and his last wish proves to be a doozy. “Keepsake” by Jack Oleck, illustrated by Graham Ingels, gives us the story of an undertaker mourning the death of his childhood friend and unrequited love, Miss Hettie. During his time as undertaker, he kept a deadly secret for her, and after he discovers another one of her little secrets, he will be able to keep another. A fun inclusion in the third issue is the “Letters to the Editor” column the best one that denounces the magazine as “the highest and most advanced form of Brainrot on the market today” and “the stories and thoughts that these magazines contain are truly the work of Satan.”

 

This volume provides a glimpse into the horror enjoyed in the 1950s and echoes the radio plays such as Suspense, The Mysterious Traveler, Inner Sanctum, and others. Despite the problematic elements of some of the stories, I still found enjoyable tales of terror within these pages, and the artwork was well done. This book, along with other EC Comics archival editions, would be an interesting addition for comics history, as well as courses studying comics and graphic novels. Recommended.

 

 

Reviewed by Lizzy Walker