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Book Review: The House that fell from the Sky by Patrick Delaney

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The House that fell from the Sky by Patrick Delaney

Oblivion Publishing, 2020

ISBN-13 : 978-0578660790

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

This book is perfectly placed for those who miss the weird horror of Bradbury and Bentley Little, and are aching for something new. Patrick Delaney has arrived with a strong entry into horror that is tough to classify here; is it weird horror, cosmic horror, or something else? Read on. The journey (quite long at 566 pages) is a wild and rewarding one.

What do you do when a house lands in the middle of town, seemingly dropped from the sky? Well, first off, it’s not quite a house. What it truly is defies logic. Several stories tall, with unknown rooms within, it both petrifies and intrigues the town. In classic horror novels, the townsfolk would run for cover (save for the cliched characters in bad movies). In this case, true to the current unreality that’s taken over our world, everyone treats the unknown entity like a traffic accident that needs to be examined, eschewing any dangers.

Scarlett, Tommy, Jackson, and Hannah meander through life. Scarlett, a recent dropout from college at age 29, is in search of something to connect herself to anything meaningful. She’s the glue that holds the group– and the novel– together. Each major character is drawn in believably flawed design, so that the mixture of the group adds to the intrigue and horror that lead them to enter the house, and elicits true empathy for the characters– not neccesarily a given in horror today.

Of course, corporate America steps in (a nice touch) and offers up a lottery to determine who will be the first visitors/victims to the monstrosity sitting in their city. There is a cash reward for entering, but  exiting could be a bit difficult from this Lovecraftian Hotel California.

When Hannah buys her way in, the others jump in to help save her.

What is the house itself? To save the secrets within and protect readers from spoilers, what lurks within is drawn much differently from any generic haunted house. Delaney borrows from the greats and devises something unique. Refreshingly, his storytelling and plot twists sidestep a number of cliches common to the haunted house subgenre.

Delaney has spun a fun tale that will keep fans of intriguing horror entertained throughout, and produced something that will keep everyone on their toes. Recommended.

 

Reviewed by David Simms

 

Musings: Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare

 

cover art for Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare  (  Bookshop.org |  Amazon.com )

Clown in a Cornfield by Adam Cesare

HarperTeen, 2020

ISBN-13 : 978-0062854599

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook

 

Clown in a Cornfield has the cover art, title, and pacing I’d expect from a pulp paperback from the 1970s-1980s, but a very contemporary feel. It takes place in a small, rural town in Missouri. Quinn Maybrook has just moved from Philadelphia to Kettle Springs, where her father has taken over the town doctor’s practice to give both of them a fresh start after her mother died by drug overdose. A year prior to the events of the book, Cole Hill and his friends livestreamed a prank for their YouTube channel that led to the accidental death of Cole’s younger sister, and shortly before the story begins, Cole attempted to burn down an abandoned factory owned by his father’s company, Baypen. Baypen’s mascot is a clown, Frendo, and it might as well be Kettle Springs’ mascot, as well.

Quinn’s first day at school gets a rocky start when she is caught in the crossfire between Cole and his friends and the science teacher as he angrily ejects them from his classroom, but she soon finds herself included in the group. Quinn discovers that almost everything they do is to get an on-camera reaction. A dangerous prank at the town’s Founder’s Day parade causes a lot of anger in the community, especially from the sheriff, who holds a lot of power and is a very convincing man.

The teens have planned a party in a barn in the middle of a cornfield on the farm of a family who has left on vacation, and despite the damage, a huge crowd arrives to drink and dance. That’s when Frendo, the clown, shows up, and events quickly escalate into a large-scale, fast-paced, violent, and bloody massacre.

Small, rural towns in mid-America tend to be very conservative, very white, and attached to traditional values. They are mostly financially depressed, mainly because nearby manufacturing has failed and family farming isn’t very profitable. Gun ownership, especially for hunting, is common. And communities are usually small enough that their identities center on high school sports, including the mascots. I’ve worked in a really small, rural town, and every day when I got off the highway exit I drove past miles and miles of corn. Cesare really captures the character of these communities, and while some characters are relatively stock, such as the sheriff, others are well-fleshed out.  I especially was impressed with the portrayal of Rust,  who could easily have been a cariacature of a gun-happy redneck but instead was a nuanced, thoughtful, and resourceful character. There’s also positive representation of gay characters, and an interesting Asian “mean girl”.

My daughter didn’t feel that the motivation for the massacre was believable, but having watched the events of the past week play out, I can now fully believe that clowns could turn in a violent and deadly way on people they feel alienated from if they believe there is a threat to their way of life. Clown in a Cornfield moves along quickly and may appeal to reluctant readers. Slasher fans and teens looking for a terrifying, gory story will find it here. Highly recommended for grades 9+.

Contains: extreme violence, gore, murder, body horror

 

 

Book Review: The Final Girl by Wol-vriey

cover art for The Final Girl by Wol-vriey  Bookshop.comAmazon.com )

The Final Girl by Wol-vriey

Burning Bulb Publishing, 2020

ISBN: 9781948278263

Available: paperback, Kindle

 

Wol-vriey’s prior novel, The Virgin, previously reviewed here, was a hit with his fans, and left them clamoring for a sequel.  Ask, and ye shall receive: The Final Girl was a game show alluded to in The Virgin.  Thankfully, the Nigerian splat-master listened to the fans, took the idea and turned it into its own bookIt’s chock-full of what his readers love and expect: a fast-paced story with creativity, gore, and twisted humor.  It has everything that made the prior novel such a good read, the main difference being this one will appeal to a broader audience, due to the non-existence of rape and graphic sex in the book.

 

Like its predecessor, The Final Girl revolves around a reality show broadcast on the dark web, and available for viewing to anyone willing to pony up the dough.  It stars eight women contestants placed in an underground mock-up town. A sum of 24 million dollars is hidden somewhere in the town.  All the ladies have to do is find it and avoid getting killed by the monsters that populate the town.  The catch?  There can be only one woman alive at the end, so the contestants have plenty of motivation to kill each other, as well as the monsters.  After the starting bell goes off to open the show, mayhem ensues.

 

As expected, The Final Girl is another runaway train of a novel, most readers will burn through its 190 pages in a sitting or two.    The creativity shown with the monsters in the book is one of the highlights.  They aren’t made up monsters per se, but instead, they are made from human corpses, stitched together and re-animated by a company that has mastered genetic engineering.  Example: the human centipede, made from a bunch of human torsos sewn together in sections, with arms for legs, and a human head on each end.  Kids aren’t spared here either; there are also children’s bodies with flippers added, turning them into homicidal fish-babies that populate the lake in the center of town.  These creatures are mean and scary enough to give the gun-toting contestants all they can handle.

 

As for the contestants, they are fleshed out better than the last story, well enough the reader will actually be cheering for some of them, and despising others.  The pious little Muslim girl, Fatima, is a genuine charmer who is almost impossible to dislike.  On the other end, you have the identical (and identically brain-dead) twins Cherry and Berry, who are easy to dislike and root against.  Their annoying habit of always finishing each other’s sentences contributes greatly to their aggravation factor.  A dysfunctional mother-stepdaughter team, a cop, a nurse, and a hooker round out the rest of the characters, but be prepared for some surprises, as not all the characters are what they seem.  The one uniting factor is these ladies are no wimps; they can dish it out as well as any Western gunslingers when survival is on the line, as long as they have enough ammunition.

 

Combine the above with the author’s usual fast-paced style of writing and splat, and you’ve got a winner of a story. The Final Girl does have broader appeal than his usual work.  A weak spot in Wol-vriey’s writing has always been the frequent, graphic sex, that never really seemed to contribute to the story.  This time, there isn’t ANY sex in the book, although there is a rape threat, which never materializes.  By removing this element, Wol-vriey trimmed the last bit of fat off his writing, leaving a pure, stripped-down thriller of a horror novel.  Fans of Jack Ketchum and Brian Keene should devour this book, and for people looking at reading splat writing for the first time, this is a great place to start.  It’s the closest the author has come to writing a book with mass market appeal, and it’s his best yet.  Highly recommended.

 

 

 

 

Contains: violence, extreme gore, profanity, drug use, body horror

 

Reviewed by Murray Samuelson