Soul Eater took quite a bit to get into, with Jeter giving us lots of what appear to be unrelated dream sequences; only later do these start to make sense. Perhaps this narrative style explains the wide array of ratings here, for Jeter forces you to make an effort; the question then becomes whether or not the effort pays off. I liked it in the end.
Our main protagonist, David, has absorbed some strange punches over the years. He separated from his wife 5 years prior and his daughter Dee went with his mother, who moved back to the old family estate. David only sees Dee on the weekends. About a year before this starts, David's wife Renee had something like a stroke and now exists as a vegetable, being cared for by her sister Carol (who also lives in the old family manse). What triggers the action concerns little Dee, age 10 or so, who one night almost stabbed her father to death in his sleep; he awoke just in time to stop the knife, but the string of profanities she then shouted shook him perhaps even further. What the hell has gotten into little Dee?
While this may sound like a creepy kid story, those being oh so popular at the time this was written (1983), Dee is simply the tip of the iceberg that David discovers. This is a bit spoilery, but Renee and her brother Jess seemed to have been into some strange foo, studying with a guru of sorts to learn the secret of having your soul live after the body fails. Well, Renee and Jess took the 'left path' or 'dark way', seeking to obtain the ability to transfer their souls to others, blood relatives being the easiest. So, is Renee, lying comatose in bed, up to something naughty? It surely seems so, and the focus seems to be little Dee...
Jeter did manage to build some good tension here, and even a good creep factor, but it took some time to establish this; the last half of the novel moved nicely, however. A possession novel of a sort, but not one rooted in demons and such, deftly touching an old horror trope but giving it a new spin. Jeter also gives us here some super creepy scenes, but I will leave these for the reader to discover. Jeter does leave several questions unanswered by the denouement or I might have rated this higher. 3.5 possessed stars!