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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: Subhuman: A Unit 51 Novel by Michael McBride

Subhuman: A Unit 51 Novel by Michael McBride

Pinnacle, 2017

ISBN-13: 978-0786041589

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD

Subhuman is the first book in a new series, Unit 51, and if the signs are correct, this will be one of the most exciting thriller/horror series in several years. Imagine Michael Crichton and F. Paul Wilson teaming up to write “The Thing”, and you’ll have an idea of what Michael McBride has accomplished in this book. This entertaining story with tons of fascinating science and history takes the reader on an exhilirating ride through the thrilling plot, with plenty of adventure and horror.

Five of the top scientists in the world have been are invited to investigate something strange in Antarctica. A billionaire has built a research facility  that has broken through the ice, and discovered something that will change both the past and future. Strange, misshapen skulls have been found all over the globe, and clues have pointed to an ancient race that may signal explanations for many of the mysteries which have plagued mankind for thousands of years. The scientists find the remains of a long-lost civilization under the surface, and later, when microbes are examined, the scientists find that some of the race from the lost civilization  may not be completely extinct. The cells under the microscope fight death, and may shatter conspiracy theories everywhere.

It will be great to see where this series goes next as, while the science can be heavy at times, it never overwhelms, and the action scenes breeze by with skill. Subhuman doesn’t skimp on anything that makes a thriller thrill and has just the right amount of horror. A great mix of genres that will keep fans awake late at night, and frustrated that the ride is over too quickly. Recommended.

 

Reviewed by Dave Simms

 

 

Book Review: Relics by Tim Lebbon

Relics by Tim Lebbon
Titan Books,  March 2017
ISBN-13: 978-1785650307
Available: Pre-order, paperback and Kindle edition

Tim Lebbon is no stranger to penning genre-twisting tales. He has written the apocalyptic novels Silence, Coldbrook, and The Nature of Balance, and the more fantastic Fallen and Echo City. Now he has hit 2017 hard, with the first book of what promises to be a breathtaking trilogy. Equal parts thriller, horror, and fantasy, Relics showcases Lebbon’s skill at world building. A dark market exists in this world, a place where items that harken back to “The Time”, can be bought and sold.  The market is hidden from most of humanity, but those who do know of it seek to collect these artifacts, at all costs.

Angela Gough lives a quiet existence, a happy one, with her lover, Vince. When he disappears, she fears the mundane: a new lover, an accident, or even murder. What she discovers is almost beyond her comprehension; another world exists, and she needs to become a part of it to have any chance of retrieving him alive.  On her journey, she discovers unlikely allies: some are human, others are not. Figuring out who is deadly and who she can trust is a challenge, with everyone promising to be a savior to her lover, even while pursuing their own dark agendas. With her partners in adventuring, she begins a journey into the darkness. There, she discovers creatures hidden both in the shadows and right under our noses; some wish for peace, while others seek our destruction.  What Angela finds shatters her view of reality; in her quest to find her lover,  a new world that might spell disaster for humankind, is converging with ours.

In Relics, Tim Lebbon has created yet another wonderful world for readers to lose themselves in, one that will likely remind of both Gaiman and Barker, yet speeds along with the thriller pace of a James Rollins or John Connelly novel.  Lebbon’s writing, as always, seduces his readers, inviting them into his imagination, where they find themselves immersed in a fantastic, horrific roller coaster ride that ends too soon. Luckily, there will be two additional books to allow us back into this world, and complete the journey begun here.

Highly recommended. If you weren’t a fan of Tim Lebbon before, this will likely be the novel to change your mind.

Reviewed by David Simms