Bentley Little is an author I've heard a lot of praise for, he's a horror writer who's very well known for his unique sense of bizarre humor and social commentary. A very popular author but one whose works I can imagine won't be to everyone's tastes. I previously read The Return from him and whilst I enjoyed it, I did find it quite a flawed novel that needed at least a re-write to iron out a few of the bugs and a more satisfying conclusion. But as I said in that review, I haven't been deterred from this author at all and immediately found myself getting excited for The Summoning, his vampire novel. But what did I think of it? Will I continue to read this author or will this author's works turn out to be something that's not for me? Let's find out!
Reverend Dan Wheeler is a servant of the lord with a grotesque disregard for those he considers to be beneath him, filled with prejudices and hatred towards women and people from other cultures to the very core of his soul. So when an apparition of Jesus Christ comes to him with a message of building a church to prepare for the second coming, it isn't a surprise when chaos soon ensues. The small town of Rio Verde, population of ten thousand is a tourist spot where its businesses' are unfortunately dying. But with a vampire now on the loose, it seems the locals have more than the economy to worry about. However, these murders aren't those depicted in the typical Western vampire legends, only a woman by the name of Sue Wing descended from a Chinese family has an idea of the truth, and with her grandmother having previously since such a creature as a child, knows exactly what their facing up against. Together along with 5 other locals, they must face the evil that has infiltrated their beloved town, but with a corrupt religious cult against them, fighting a creature from the dawn of time might be harder than they initially thought.
The Summoning is a masterpiece of a novel, it's a truly terrifying and unique Vampire novel that doesn't fall on the usual legends that have been used to help devise villains such as Dracula or Kurt Barlow to piece together its story, in typical Bentley Little fashion of doing something unique, he looks towards the vampiric legends of other cultures to help put together this novel and I must say he does an amazing job depicting an entirely different type of Vampire from the ones we're used too.
It's an incredibly atmospheric and grotesque novel, that doesn't pull any of its punches and has some truly bizarre and horrifying scenes spread throughout its narrative. Graveyards being defiled, bodies drained of all floods, a psychologically disturbed father swimming in a tank of excrement, and walls covered in human corpses depicting gruesome verses of the bible, help make this novel stand on its own from the other vampire novels and help realize it as being something truly special and extraordinary. It has a terrific cast of characters who are so brilliantly realized and realistic, the relationships between family members, friends, and the locals all help make the world-building in this novel feel incredibly rich and well thought out. The good guys in this story are incredibly likable but realistic enough to have flaws, the villains (particularly Reverend Dan Wheeler in this case) are a pair of pure evil psychotics whose disregard, lust, and hunger for those around them in either a metaphorical or purely physical sensation are utterly sickening and terrifying in equal measure.
This is an incredibly tense and disturbing novel that deals with some very distressing and unfortunately realistic themes. Such as the brainwashing that comes from religious extremism and the hatred it can breed among its disciples, subtle or downright violent racism towards Asian people, religious disregard and hatred towards women, and the sheer arrogance and manipulation that stems from people in a position of power, whether that be in the police force or corrupt religious beliefs.
Overall: This is a bloody terrifying novel with some incredible characterization, a chilling atmosphere, disturbing descriptions of gore and violence, terrific world-building, and a nice sense of humor to help lighten the story a little when it needs to. It's genuinely one of the best Vampire novels I've ever read, but like many great horror stories, it does manage to still highlight how human evil will always be scarier than the monsters we find in fiction. 10/10