Elisa Menz is the New Queen of Fabulous Plot Twists!
What a gem of a book! Easy Guide to Escape Hell by Elisa Menz is one of the best books I’ve read this year. I downloaded a sample to check it out and was immediately hooked. Main character, Josephine Gardiner, decides to ditch her parents’ overwhelming demands and expectations when she gets a chance to start a new life in a new town in an inherited—and very old—manor house. The catch? She needs to fix the place up to code and commit to not selling it for at least 20 years. Sounds easy enough, right?
Before the reader is introduced to Josephine, chapter one features yet another main character, Dagon Gunthersson, a demon warrior hailing from a noble family in Hell. Dagon is arrogant, threatening, and arguably unreasonable, and Josephine is not afraid to stand up to him. While sometimes she feels fragile on the inside, she’s willing to pull herself up by the bootstraps and do what’s right. The two find themselves living in the same house along with a gargoyle named Rosier (I adore him), the Brona (quite interesting), over 375 enthusiastic kobolds (I would like some), and one loveable lust demon. Together, the motley group of roommates faces more than one massive challenge, leaning on odd neighbors and leveraging hope. And elbow grease.
This is one of those books that is so hard to review because there is much to love and many scenes (spoilers) that can’t be shared. However, I was so over the moon with the author's wit and innovative storyline I frequently described the scenes—and sometimes reenacted them—in the kitchen to my husband’s amusement. I was *that* invested in the plot. Author Menz explored some of my favorite themes—navigating difficult family dynamics, stretching outside comfort zones, found family (Menz truly excels here), and learning to find courage and not abandon hope when all seems lost.
The story is clever, and *just* when I thought I couldn’t be wowed by another revelation, Menz zipped in another shocker. Here’s the cool part: NOTHING felt forced. It all fit together and was believable. The author pulled it off with a crisp efficiency that propelled me through the chapters at a blazing pace. Josephine is relatable as a main character, and you want her to succeed—to make it despite the roadblocks her parents are behind. Dagon is…Oh, I’ll just say it: I fell for him early on. There was a true sweetness buried under his demands and behavior. I started rooting for Dagon soon after meeting him.
There are real bad guys and complications, rogue angels and heartache, loss and reconciliation. I even had a smidgen of compassion for a truly vile character as some of his backstory was revealed. In other words, Menz knows how to draw out readers’ emotions and sometimes challenge them. You will get a lump in your throat when Josephine first plays the piano and when Dagon’s “innocence” (of sorts) is revealed.
Some great lines:
* “Oh, god…please be a rat,” she whispered.
* “Hey Horns!” she shouted. “The name is Josephine!”
* Humans, angels, demons. The same unimaginative macho bravado was disappointing.
* Because nothing says ‘fatherly love’ more clearly than beheading.
* “Praise seitan.” “Oh, thank you, darling.” (You have to know what seitan is—this is so seriously funny.)
Easy Guide to Escape Hell is exciting, incredibly humorous—I really did laugh out loud more than once, and completely satisfying! The heat level is about a 2 out of 5 and adds a nice touch to the story, but it’s not explicit.
Fans of paranormal-meets-everyday-life stories, enemies-to-lovers plots, Alpha males who really aren’t jerks underneath it all, and supernatural beings like demons and angels will love this book. Go grab a copy now!
A total 5-star read. I can’t wait until Elisa Menz releases her next book!