My coworker read this and practically threw the book at me the next day at work and said I needed to read it. Is it good? I asked.
I don't know, she said. That's why you need to read it. You need to explain what just happened.
It doesn't take much for me to oblige bookish requests like this, and it so happened a four-day weekend was coming up for us - a perfect time for me to read this book.
I read it today. It's short. It reads quickly. It seemed appropriate to read over Good Friday.
I was on board throughout the entire first part of this book. It starts out in the late 1990s, a time I know very well, and so I felt a certain kinship with it. The whole VHS tape thing reminded me of The Ring movie franchise, and hey, that can be fun. And then I kept reading.
By Part Two I decided that not only was it a bit like The Ring franchise, but it also a smidge like the Sinister movies. I was still on board. It's a compelling read; not perfect, but readable, and with the windows open and the nice weather it just felt like a very comfortable read.
By the time I finished Part Four (the end of the book) I no longer had any idea what was really happening. I mean, I get it. I can go to work on Monday and talk with my coworker about it and, if she was serious, explain the story to her. But I can't say I liked it.
It's not a clean story. The jumps in time, the jumps between characters - it all made it just sort of a drag to read. For something that is considered by many readers to be a "horror" novel (it's not, not really), I would have thought that the end result would be way more satisfying. But the path to the end wasn't even satisfying, so that's a bummer all around.
I could read it in just a few hours because it is not even quite 200 pages. I think Darnielle is probably an okay writer. He's in The Mountain Goats, for crying out loud, they can usually spin a good sentence or two. I haven't read Darnielle's first novel that everyone was raving about for a few minutes, though I'm sure at some point I will. I just can't help but think, with this book anyway, that if someone else wrote the book, would it be considered good at all? I get what Darnielle was going for, his statements on loss, but it didn't come together for me with the rest of the story. It's almost like he had too many ideas that he wanted to put together in one book, and that's usually a recipe for disaster because it's hard to flesh any of those ideas out.
I said it's not quite a horror novel, despite what everyone is saying, but I am still going to put it on my GR horror shelf simply because there are aspects of this story that are actually very well written and creepy AF, and therein lies the success of Darnielle's novel. I just wanted more of it. Consistency. It's kind of like a NaNoWriMo novel I wrote a couple of years ago - small town, creepy as shit things happening, but not all that well written, and probably could have used better editing.
Not the worst thing I've read, but a bit of a let-down for me.
I'm sure this will become a movie at some point.