It’s definitely been taking me way too long to read lately.
I really should have finished this book much sooner. It’s a fun little novel and not at all long. Other aspects of my life have been intruding on my reading time; I’m going to try my best to read my next novel at a more reasonable pace.
Hoodoo, in many ways, is like savoring a rich piece of Southern dark chocolate. I adored how vivid the descriptions are in this book, from the swamp and the trees and the town to the food. And oh, there is food. The author never passes up an opportunity to describe the very luscious meals that the protagonist’s guardians provide for him in great detail. I always felt hungry while reading this book. These descriptions — food or otherwise — really made the novel come alive to me. I truly felt like I was in that warm, swampy village while reading this.
The narrator’s voice also really brings the story to life. It’s written in first person, and you really feel like the protagonist’s sitting at your ear, telling you this story. Everything from his vocabulary to his sentence structure enhances the protagonist’s personality as well as the time period.
Speaking of time period — this novel is not about racial tension, but still carefully and gracefully addresses the race issues that would appear in the South during segregation. For example, the protagonist references that black civilians are only allowed to attend a festival on a certain day, and how he doesn’t think that’s right. This information educates younger audiences, creates awareness for racial inequality in history, and also pushes an older audience to look for more subtle signs of inequality in the novel.
But my favorite aspect of this novel: its gothic soul. This novel really is the personification of the Southern gothic. Demons, old hymns, spirit worlds, talking crows, hoodoo, pacts with the devil, the hangman’s noose, the Free Masons... this novel is just brimming with a dark, particularity Southern, essence. I loved every minute of it.
So why not five stars?
While its setting is vivid and gothic, the book’s plot moves rather slowly. Much of the novel is the main character gathering ingredients for magic ‘mojo bags’ that end up not helping him. The scenario that the blurb at the back of the book describes does not happen until the very, very end of the novel — like the last thirteen pages.
There’s also a couple of logical hiccups (in my opinion, at the very least) — Why is this demon only appearing now? Why did the main character’s abilities only manifest now? What is this demon figure doing while the protagonist is wandering around, collecting magic items?
Otherwise, I felt that the relationships between the characters could have been more interesting. Hoodoo, our protagonist, only really has one friend — and they mostly sit around talking or eating. Couldn’t we have seen them in some tense or more emotional situations? Maybe investigating together? There’s a moment where Hoodoo sneaks into an old, abandoned building; maybe his friend could have could have come with him. There is a brief moment where him and his friend face bullies — but it’s diffused rather quickly, and the scene is a rare one in the book.
I did appreciate, however, that the main character looks to a lot of older women for guidance throughout the story. Both Mama Frances and Mrs. Snuff are a nice touch.
Overall, wonderful gothic imagery, but could have moved a little more quickly and has a little more character interaction.