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Book Review: The Ones We’re Meant to Find by Joan He

Cover art for The Ones We're Meant to Find by Joan He

 

The Ones We’re Meant to Find  by Joan He

Roaring Book Press, 2021

ISBN-13 ‏ : ‎ 978-1250258564

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

 

 

 

Every time I thought I had this book figured out, it took me in an unexpected direction.

 

There are two alternating plotlines. First, we are introduced to Cee. Cee is trapped on a deserted island, with few memories but with an urgent feeling that she must get off the island and find her sister Kay..

 

Then we meet Kasey, living in a climate-ravaged world. At sixteen, Kasey is a scientific genius who works for the government office responsible for finding solutions for human survival. The living situation is desperate. The most privileged individuals live in eco cities in the air, where they are required to spend much of their time in stasis, participating in life virtually, as a cleaner option than that available to those with pollution karma. Even this is becoming unsustainable, and Kasey is part of the bureaucracy trying to find a solution quickly, as weather and radiation worsen dramatically, killing millions. Yet even in this desperate state there is debate over whether it’s worth it to survive without freedom and self-determination, or in some cases, at all. As this situation continues, Kasey is also searching for her sister, Celia, a free spirit, who disappeared at sea and is believed dead.

 

There is a really slow start and neither Cee or Kasey start out as deeply emotional, but the puzzle is intriguing and He does a great job bringing both worlds to life. This book is really going to disturb some people but there are some interesting ethical and scientific debates being explored and the choices the primary characters make are often unexpected. It’s not what one expects from typical horror, but it isn’t a title that readers will forget soon.

 

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski

Book Review: Hell Spring by Isaac Thorne

cover art for HEll Spring by Isaac Thorne

 

Hell Spring by Isaac Thorne

 

Lost Hollow Books, September 2022

 

ISBN: 9781938271540

 

Availabile: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition  Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

 

March, 1955.  A handful of residents in a small Southern hick town get trapped in a mom n’ pop convenience store by a raging flood.  What could possibly go wrong?  Well, when one of those people is a soul-sucking demon masquerading as a Marilyn Monroe look-alike, a LOT can go wrong, and it does.  That’s the basic premise of Isaac Thorne’s Hell Spring.  It has its good moments, but may be a bit too slow and drawn out for most readers.

 

The setup chapters for each character before they become trapped in the store are the best sections of the book: well-written, and good enough to make the reader feel invested in the characters.  They are an eclectic bunch, each with their own little secrets.  The town piano teacher is hiding the fact that he’s gay, one lady isn’t mentioning that she just killed her abusive wretch of a husband…each person has their own little bit of shame or guilt.  These secrets, and the guilt they cause are what the Marilyn Monroe succubus feeds on while trapped with the townsfolk.  It’s the middle of the book, a couple hundred pages long, where things slow down and get somewhat routine.  Everyone is trapped in the store, and one by one, the demon Marilyn feeds on their guilt and reduces the victim to a chittering crawdad-like creature.  No one notices the disappearances, since she somehow alters time and perception around everyone.  People just vanish, and the others don’t even know they were ever there at all.  It’s interesting the first couple times but then gets repetitive, and bogs the narrative down.  The story does pick up again towards the end, and has a kicker of a finish set decades later.  Graphing the book, it would look like a peak at the beginning sloping down to a long, flat plain, and then another peak at the end of the story.  There are some quick peaks in the middle that involve characters outside the store; that help break up the slow pace and get a different setting involved.  Whether those are enough to compensate for the rest will depend on the reader.

 

Bottom line:  there are definite high points, but the somewhat long middle section may not be enough to keep the interest of most readers.  This is a story that might have worked much better in a slimmed down form, with the middle section involving the store condensed.  A novella of the narrative might have been a perfect fit.

 

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson

Book Review: Howl by Shaun David Hutchinson

 

Howl by Shaun David Hutchinson

Simon & Schuster, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-5344-7092-7

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

 

Virgil Knox is a gay teen who has moved from Seattle to live with his grandparents in his father’s rural hometown in the South with his father while his parents resolve their divorce. Following a party, he finds himself in rags with bloody claw marks and a bite mark, certain he has been attacked by a monster but unable to remember what happened or how. He is told by multiple people it didn’t happen. Captured on video, he goes viral and receives a lot of hate and nasty jokes from other students. The only class he cares about is theater, and a student from that class, Tripp, and his cousin, Astrid are his only friends. As the cuts heal, he notices his body is changing in disturbing ways. His classmates Finn and Jarrett swing from being friendly to being cruel. Virgil is afraid there is a monster inside him trying to get out. The question is, will he become a monster or master it?

 

This is a supremely uncomfortable book to read. While there is no explicit description of rape the description and narrative around the main character’s attack is suggestive of trauma caused by sexual assault combined with gaslighting (it is unclear what actually occurred as he is blackout drunk). There’s self-harm, body dysmorphia, hazing, severe bullying and cyberbullying. The town’s treatment of Virgil is the real horror of the story.

 

 

Reviewed by Kirsten Kowalewski