Can you imagine what it’s like to lose the love of your life twice?
Yay! I can start using my smiley face emojis to actually depict satisfaction with my reading again! That's thanks to L.R. Giles "Live Again", which I found to be a very entertaining and legitimately spooky one-sitting horror tale! Though not perfectly executed (where are the Blue Ride Mountains?), I was still able to become utterly enraptured by Giles well-formulated and definitely effective story of loss, rebirth and loss again.
I’m afraid I might’ve led you straight into Hell.
Our story starts with poor Keith, a young man that lost his wife to cancer a short while ago. To make matters worse - an idiom which we definitely see embodied in several ways throughout this story - it appears that her death was not exactly due to the cancer and was very likely unnecessary. It seems that her doctor "might’ve had too much coffee before performing a ‘simple’ procedure"? Only we later learn it was so, so much worse than that, a fact that sends Keith to even deeper depths. It is therefore no surprise that Keith is suffering from severe depression and even suicidal thoughts… and attempted actions. But fate - and perhaps even his own stubbornness - has different plans for the young man.
That is the nature of curses. They stay with you always.
On a night out seeking to drown both his sorrows and maybe even himself, he comes face-to-face in a dirty honky-tonk watering hole with someone who we will eventually piece together is an all-powerful, immortal Necromancer. Yep, one so powerful he's earned the Capital N. And it turns out this … gentleman can control time, space, and reality. Even so, he has one simple question for Keith: "Would you bring [your wife] back, say, if you had a wish?" But just as with so many stories featuring genies in bottles and other magical beings that offer rewards that seem just too good to be true, we all know that there has to be a catch to such a "kind and generous" offer. Who knows though? Maybe his wife can be brought back with no consequences. But keeping her here… now that may be another story entirely!
If I was in Heaven, can I ever go back? Will they let me in with these things inside me?
From here we see then just how quickly Keith's world starts to fall apart, especially as he makes the fateful decision to indeed resurrect the love of his life. Giles takes on a whirlwind journey of what effect this has on not only Keith - and the newly "reborn" Adair - as well as their remaining neighbors and friends. For it becomes all too apparent that the being that seems in all ways to be his deceased wife is very, very different to the woman he fell in love with. Almost as if she wasn't the only one occupying her body… which might explain her Herculean strength as well as certain "appetites" that she MUST satisfy on a yearly basis. Just do NOT say a blessing before you have dinner, you might burn the house down! Yeah, as you might have guessed, it gets pretty gruesome, especially when you're sleeping in bed next to what amounts to a mystically reincarnated zombie!
Red, wet holes rimmed with triangular piranha’s teeth appeared all over their bodies.
What I really appreciated then is that Giles uses every introduced "contact" that we make throughout the story - most of whom have equally difficult traumas to deal with - in some way. Sometimes they pass quickly by (or are perhaps just ignored) and other times they have more influence on the outcome of this journey than might be expected. Things get very, very messy for a while and it seems even that Keith's life is at its end as well… but we are then surprised with a destructive finale that would make any chapter of the Halloween franchise green with envy. Hm, maybe mentioning green things isn't the best idea what with some of gorier parts of our tale. But the book builds up nicely and just as we're thinking "ok, we've survived… well, some of us have survived", there is a really cool cliffhanger to enjoy! And yes, it's just a little too believable for comfort!
There was a blood detonation as they tore into him simultaneously. Fat, red drops drizzled all around.
Overall then, this is, again, a quick read; however, even though I wish it had continued, it felt like the author handled the shorter "format" if you will more than adequately. I mean, don't force it if its not there! And yes, again, the editing could have been improved … hang on, just let me confirm one thing. Yep, I was right: "If the quotation of a complete sentence is interrupted in the middle and then continues after the interruption, do not capitalize the second part of the quotation. Use commas to set off the explanatory words." But trust me, I've seen much more egregious examples among my last few selections (hint: that's putting it mildly). Bottom-line: this is a very enjoyable book with a great feel of warning to it! I've definitely got L.R.Giles on my radar now!
I love you, but I hate you a little, too.
But friends, do be careful what you ask for in life or even in death… after all, you just might get it!