UNIDENTIFIED, by Michael McBride is yet another example of his mastery in the horror "novella". This book has everything needed to create a lasting impression on the reader, in a condensed format: complex characterization, mystery, horror/death, atmosphere, and of course, the "unknown" element--where the reader doesn't immediately sense where the end will take them.
We begin with Eric Delvin emailing three words to his friend. These three words are in relation to a traumatizing event that occurred to five teenaged-friends, 40 years prior:
"I remember everything."
The events alternate between the happenings that this group--Kyle, Bruce, Val, Eric, and Wyatt--encountered when they were 15, and of the present time, when most of them are brought together again for the first time in years. Despite their different ways of coping in the interim, no matter how deeply buried they left their pasts, things all begin to come together again.
"Sir Arthur Conan Doyle wrote: "Once you eliminate the impossible, whatever remains, no matter how improbable, must be the truth." Sherlock Holmes had never faced the improbability of . . . though."
A fast-paced horror adventure from the first page to the last.
Highest recommendation!