Reviews

All reviews are subject to the library's Patron-Generated Content policy.

 

False Bingo Posted by NealP on Thursday, January 30, 2020

Jac Jemc’s latest work, False Bingo, is an unnerving collection of stories where the mundane and ordinary ride upon a wave of anxiety.  Building on the hallucinatory strangeness of her previous novel, The Grip of It, Jemc’s writing is spare and beautiful.  There are elements of Shirley Jackson in this volume, but Jemc’s voice is unique and original.

Creepiness pervades stories like “Hunt and Catch” where a woman commuting home from work believes a garbage truck driver is following her.  In the story “Don’t Lets,” a woman recovering from an abusive relationship vacations at a southern plantation and is visited by a boo hag, a creature from folklore that steals the breath of its victims.

Despite these themes, False Bingo is not merely a collection of horror stories.  The psychological tension Jemc evokes takes the reader into the realm of dread, suspense, and the absurd; demonstrating that it is undeniably creepier to wonder than it is to know. 

The Uninhabitable Earth Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

The Uninhabitable Earth by David Wallace-Wells describes the effects of global warming as a terrifying apocalypse of biblical proportions – the price of doing nothing or not enough.  Wallace-Wells describes the horror human beings might face including floods, pestilence, famines, and wildfires.  Modeling his approach after Rachel Carson’s Silent Spring, he hopes to increase awareness for greenhouse gases like Carson did for pesticides.

A key strength of the book is the writing.  Wallace-Wells stays away from overly scientific terminology in favor of intense and evocative descriptions of disaster – children dying, plagues released, and towns burning.  He effectively uses fear to motivate us to take action. 

Not all is doom and gloom, though.  Wallace-Wells acknowledges that our responsibility as a species for global warming is actually a good thing, in that it demonstrates that we also have the power to do something about it.  For him, apathy is our worst enemy.  The Uninhabitable Earth is a powerful wakeup call for all of us on the path to extinction.     

Brian Evenson’s latest… Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

Brian Evenson’s latest collection of stories, Song for the Unraveling of the World, are as fantastic as they are terrifying.  A man discovers items mysteriously disappearing from his apartment.  A new pair of glasses reveal shadow-like creatures. 

Most of these 22 tales begin with a mystery or an anomaly, which may or may not be resolved in terms of traditional horror or science fiction stories.  Evenson’s writing is unique within the horror and sci-fi genres.  His writing style is reminiscent of H.P. Lovecraft and Shirley Jackson, but also contains elements of Franz Kafka, Raymond Carver, and Cormac McCarthy.

Song for the Unraveling of the World is an eclectic collection that is unique within the familiar constraints of horror and sci-fi.  Evenson’s ability to have stories occupy genre, but remain unique is fascinating and worth your time.      

All My Colors Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

Todd Milstead is a real jerk.  He is egotistical, he drinks too much, and he cheats on his wife.  He thinks he is a great writer, but has not published anything of significance.  One night, while showing off to friends at one of his parties, he quotes a paragraph from a book All My Colors – a book that may or may not exist.  Astounded that no one has ever heard of it, and with a perfect recollection, he publishes it himself to instant acclaim.  Then things get weird...

Written by Emmy-award winning author David Quantick (Veep) and set in DeKalb, IL in 1979 All My Colors is a darkly humorous, twisted, and terrifying novel that shows the painful price one pays for their actions.

Cherry Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

Nico Walker’s debut novel Cherry is a raw and devastating account of war, addiction, and love.  His writing is bleak, insightful, explicit, and unsettling. 

The novel follows an unnamed narrator who goes to college, falls in love, drops out of college, and joins the army.  As a medic in Iraq, he sees the effects of the war on both the civilian and soldier populations where he witnesses many of his friends die.  When he returns home, his PTSD is so profound he turns to heroin to escape his pain.  Eventually, he begins robbing banks to feed his and his wife’s addiction.    

Walker is currently in prison for bank robbery related to his own heroin addiction.  He wrote Cherry while serving his time and has used money made from the publication of the book to pay back the money he stole.   Cherry is a challenging novel in terms of language and subject matter.  Nevertheless, it is a timely book as war-related PTSD and the opioid crisis continue to haunt headlines. 

Michelle McNamara’s I’ll Be… Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

Michelle McNamara’s I’ll Be Gone in the Dark: One Woman’s Obsessive Search for the Golden State Killer remains one of my favorite books from 2018.

McNamara died tragically in 2016 prior to completion of the book, and the arrest of the GSK -- a result of a DNA link from a relative’s genetic genealogical test.  The book is dark and terrifying, but skillfully written by McNamara who mindfully humanizes the killer’s victims. 

The book itself will appeal to fans of true crime and mystery, but in McNamara’s hands she elevates the story beyond strict genre study.  I’ll Be Gone in the Dark is more than a detective story – McNamara traces changing forensic techniques through multi-decades investigations, but never loses focus of the killer, victims, investigators, and witnesses.  Readers with an interest in human nature, crime, and investigative dramas will enjoy this work.

 

The War On Normal People Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

Andrew Yang is an American entrepreneur who has worked with tech startups and is a 2020 Democratic presidential candidate.  His book The War on Normal People: The Truth about America’s Disappearing Jobs and Why Universal Basic Income is Our Future presents a bleak economic outlook for “normal people” – people who tend to work in administration, retail, food service, transportation, and manufacturing.

Yang’s thesis is not entirely new, but it is compelling.  He focuses on six cities where he sees a high concentration of what he identifies as “highly knowledge-intensive” individuals pursuing career paths in finance, consulting, law, technology, medicine, and academia.  This, he believes, has led to increasing stratification with American society as those who qualify, leave their hometowns for college and universities, and then stay in these cities to follow careers in these sectors.

What sets Yang apart from others who have studied this stratification is his argument that elites within these fields, especially tech, are consciously working to put the rest of society out of work through automation so that they can keep up with their competition.  Yang’s evidence shows the consequences of this shift are severe.  59,000 Americans died of a drug overdose in 2016 surpassing car accidents as the leading cause of accidental death in the United States.  The suicide rate is rising, marriage rates have decreased dramatically for working-class individuals, and single parenthood rates have risen. 

Yang notes that automation may not be a problem for just blue-collar workers.  The disappearance of local white-collar jobs to automation in fields like insurance, banking, journalism, and other sectors will further drain money from local economies.

Whether one agrees with Yang that Universal Basic Income (UBI) will be necessary moving forward, his ability to trace the effects of automation on American workers is compelling.   

The Grip of It Posted by NealP on Saturday, December 14, 2019

The Grip of It, a horror novel by Chicago author Jac Jemc, is a fast-paced, unsettling story of a young couple who move into a house in a small town away from the city in which they met.  The book alternates perspectives between the couple, Julie and James, as they attempt to reconnect following James’ gambling addiction and the trust issues that follow. 

As they settle in, the house, which has an unusual layout with secret passageways and rooms, becomes increasingly malevolent – rooms change, becoming unrecognizable, stains on the wall expand and contract.  This affects Julie and James mentally and physically, laying bare their unresolved problems.  They attempt to solve the mysteries surrounding the house involving past residents, and a strange neighbor who may or may not have lived there before.

Jemc’s prose is chilling, poetic, and economical.  The Grip of It is psychological horror that questions the meaning of home and its constructive and destructive effects on relationships with those we love.