I guess I will slot this under Southern Gothic horror, Massie give us here a unique tale of backwoods Virginia and the titular Sineater, a man who eats food off dead bodies at wakes to cleanse them of their sins. I have heard of sineaters before, but Massie presents here something a bit different. In this small mountain town, where few residents even have running water or electricity, tradition has it that the sineater can never be seen. The current sineater, Avery, basically lives in the woods around town; a solitary life for sure. From spying or from notice, he shows up at wakes; when he arrives, everyone turns away, for to see him means you will either go insane or die.
Avery, however, has broke tradition in that he has a family; a wife, two boys and a daughter. The family is shunned in town, where folks feel it is sinful to associate with the sineater's 'get'. Our protagonist, Joel, is the youngest son of Avery, around 11 or so, and breaking tradition yet again, attends the local school. The eldest son, Curry, never went to school, and neither did the daughter, but as Curry will be the next sineater, the onus is off Joel, and he leads a normal life to some degree.
Sineater starts off rather slow, and while the pacing picks up some, expect a slow-burn here. We learn about Joel and his existence, his only friend, the son of the local Baptist preacher, and the importantly, the local 'holy rollers' who believe the Baptist church is too moderate; they hold their own congregations, speak in tongues, handle snakes, the whole gambit. The gist of the novel concerns a power struggle between the holy rollers, led by one Missy, who see Avery as the devil incarnate for breaking 'the rules' and having a family. She desires a new way to cleanse the dead of their sins and break with the sineater. Joel, unfortunately, seems caught right in the middle. Various threats are made by Missy for those associating with the sineater's family (the mailman, the school for having Joel attend, etc.) and when things start getting bloody, Massie leaves us hanging as to who (or whom) is doing the sordid deeds...
Massie's prose sparkles at times with 'downhome' idioms and phrases which I really enjoyed and the pacing, while relatively slow, is relentless. This felt a bit young adult at times, especially with Joel being the protagonist, but it works ok here. Enjoyable read with some good twists along the way. 3.5 stars, rounding up!!