Not bad horror thriller that made use of a mythological creature, a first for me. Though there were things I didn’t care for, the book did a lot right and it was a quick and enjoyable read.
The main character is Evan. He lives in Delilah, California, a small beach and port community near San Francisco. He is not a happy man, as he and his wife Sarah are still coping with the loss of their teenage son Josh who drowned in view of the beach…and Evan, who felt powerless to save him because of a crushing, paralyzing aquaphobia. Evan had been fine with going to the beach, maybe getting his toes wet, but he never learned to swim, never ventured out into the waves, and couldn’t bring himself to save his son despite his pleas for help.
It’s been about a year since Josh drowned, his body never recovered, and Evan and Sarah aren’t handling it well. Sarah gets drunk at a local bar and has to be brought home every night by Evan, though only after Evan walks the beach each evening. Despite his crushing aquaphobia, he finds the walks soothing, a way to commune somehow with his son, and one evening, a tempting place to maybe end it all, joining Josh that way.
Only one night, instead of committing suicide, Evan hears singing and soon encounters a beautiful nude woman alone on the deserted beach. Later her name is revealed – Ligeia – not that Evan and her do much talking as they have sex. A lot of sex. Fairly graphic sex though I think in retrospect the author held back more than some reviewers gave him credit for (and also arguably needed for the plot, as it wasn’t love but lust and infatuation Evan felt, feeding a need that he wasn’t getting from the bereaved Sarah and later becoming very much an addiction).
For a time Evan leads a double life. By day Evan goes to work, takes Sarah home from the bar, and pretends things are as normal as they get for him, while each night he craves a rendezvous with Ligeia. Though sometimes his desire is quite mortal in nature, other times the author skillfully showed that he is responding to Ligeia’s power as Siren; one moment enraptured by her otherworldly music, the next finding himself neck deep in water, the terror of it breaking her spell for a least a moment.
Wracked with guilt for cheating on Sarah and worried about his inability to control himself when he sees her (he got into the water so deep she had to save him from drowning!), Evan confides in two people, his psychiatrist he sees once a week by the name of Vicky Blanchard, and his best friend at work, a mildly conspiratorial sort of person by the name of Bill (who regularly reads Homer and Milton and is well read on Greek mythology). While Vicky concentrates on whether or not Evan really saw this woman at all and getting him better (and is not as much a presence in the book), Bill, at first thinking Evan is pretty much just cheating, soon thinks Bill isn’t seeing a human woman, but rather the Siren of Delilah, a sea-ghost-story type monster responsible for wrecked ships and missing swimmers and beachcombers over the span of decades.
The remainder of the book is Evan coming to terms with Ligeia’s true nature, her power over him, his love for Sarah, and how to break free (if he can).
A couple of aspects I liked. Starting I suppose about midway through the book the author folded in flashback chapters set in 1887 aboard a ship that smuggled alcohol. This ship – the _Lady Luck_ - is captained by a somewhat unsavory man by the name of James Buckley III and he is the original owner of Ligeia, having purchased her as basically a sex slave. Luckily immune to her charms thanks to his complete inability to essentially perceive or enjoy music, the chapters with Captain Buckley and Ligeia are pretty effective horror in themselves as the unlucky crew members start to fall prey to Ligeia. I liked especially the final chapters which detailed a final showdown with Ligeia in the midst of a storm, the ship at constant risk of shipwreck, interspersed with a present-day showdown against Ligeia.
There were some ironies I liked, that Evan’s fear of the water initially saved him from Ligeia, at least for a time, while Ligeia’s hold over him gave him power over that fear, a power that wouldn’t serve Ligeia well in the end. I also liked a brief show of the other abilities of Ligeia, namely some control of other sea creatures (in this case gulls in a chilling scene).
The book had a lot of graphic violence, more graphic I think then the sex by far. Ligeia is definitely a monster and gorily killed and ate several people.
There were a few things that didn’t quite work. I didn’t have a problem with how much Josh’s death really shaped Evan and Sarah but the actual death itself seemed a tad unexplored. Given there were flashbacks (not just the _Lady Luck_ flashbacks) this might have been addressed better. Vicky Blanchard seemed poised to be major character, especially at the end, with her deep concern for Evan and her apparent psychic abilities, but never really entered the story in any real way (sorry if that is a spoiler). A couple of times Bill and Evan would go from real grief to humor really fast; while I am sure people do jump from the horrible to the humorous sometimes, at least on one occasion it didn’t ring true. One time the ending for the flashbacks on the _Lady Luck_ was to me casually spoiled though I still liked that plotline. Ligeia herself didn’t have a huge amount of depth though in the end she was a monster (albeit a sentient and intelligent one).
I certainly don’t think book is for everyone but I am glad I read it.