I recently finished this book, TORMENT - A Novel of Dark Horror by Jeremy Bishop, and it certainly needs a good review. I was honestly shocked by some of the one and two star reviews on Amazon that this book received (I don’t think I read those reviews before purchasing this $2.99 ebook from a new author) but now I am surprised that some people thought this book was bad, because I’m a pretty picky reader when it comes to zombies or anything post-apocalyptic, and to me, TORMENT was a wild, scary ride.
I bought this book nearly the second I read “Earth Escape Pods.” I guess it’s some thing I have with loving to speculate about government secrets and conspiracy theories. Does President Obama have an Earth Escape Pod? He probably should... So I was thinking that this book was going to be at least partly about random civilians getting launched unexpectedly into space and having to deal with it...and it was, for a bit, about just that... but there was a lot more running from monsters than anything else, and I wonder whether that should be more of the focus of the book summary on pages like Goodreads and Amazon.
At any rate, the story focuses on Mia and her young niece, who was with her when the world went to crap and they were able to escape earth with the president and some of his Secret Service agents and other staff. Mia’s particular story line intrigued me, as a mother myself I could put myself into Mia’s shoes, having to take care of a child in a ruined world is my ultimate nightmare of all nightmares, and I particularly enjoy and admire horror stories that include children as main characters because I think it is a very bold and gutsy thing to do. As a writer myself, I know it’s hard to kill your darlings, and for me, it’s especially harder to write about the horrors that afflict a child.
Upon returning to an earth ruined by nuclear bombs, the survivors find that the humans who (sort of) survived the destruction have turned into zombies. They aren’t your mean, scary faster and stronger than normal zombies, nor are they the slow shamblers of old horror flicks.. in a way they are worse than either of the old favorites, because Jeremy Bishop’s zombies can remember their lives and they always take the time to apologize before going in for the kill...
Mia, her niece, and her companions are forced to run and keep running, always trying to find safety away from these horrible creatures, while facing thirst and starvation to boot. They go from one place to another, and along their journey we get to know them better - that one of them is a priest who is having a hard time giving up the preaching to the few survivors who don’t want to listen, one is a president who is blamed for the destruction of the entire world, and of course there are your usual tough guys in charge, and Mia, our heroine, who is always trying to find away to go on and be strong for her orphaned niece. As the book goes on, some of Mia’s companions don’t make it, and be warned - no one in this book is spared from torment or death. The farther the book progresses, the worse the zombies get, until you are introduced to a monster of our human creation that will scare the wits out of you.
At one point during reading this I sent a Tweet to Jeremy Bishop (@Bishophorror), and said something along the lines of: “I’m now officially too scared to read your book outside, alone, in the dark,” and it was true. Spring has sprung and I like sitting outside at night and reading, but TORMENT simply spooked me out too much. Reading it, I was always too attuned to the sounds of critters in the woods around me. I was always expecting to see something coming at me from the treeline, and I was always ready to run. When a book affects you physically - that is when you know you have one hell of a scary book on your hands.
Now another fair warning - there are a lot of religious elements to this book, and I know that turns a lot of people off. Frankly, it turns me off, and I found myself rolling my eyes a lot at some of the passages with the priest and toward the end of the book when Mia was speculating on her existence and certain death. But the story is about something deeper than the weight of religion.
TORMENT touches on something that lurks in the hearts of us all - that ever-present fear of the end, that moment we all have to face. We are never ready for it.
To me, TORMENT is a solid, five star read - I really enjoyed the ride.