**Edited as review is now live on Kendall Reviews!**
I’m going to shout this from the rooftop from now until I lose my voice; I LOVE WEREWOLVES!! In books, movies, real life (they exist right?), everywhere! I absolutely love all things Were. Why? Because they scare the crap out of me.
The Mongrel has been on my periphery of ‘must-reads’ but I simply haven’t gotten around to it. When it was offered up as a potential for review, I jumped at the chance. Wouldn’t you? Ok, so maybe you don’t like werewolf stuff, fair enough. But when Matt Hayward is telling folks how great this book is and he wrote one of the books of the year with The Faithful, you take notice.
I read this in one sitting last night (November 19th). Sean O’Connor has the gift of prose. This book flowed off of my kindle and this was one of the rare times where I was shocked at how quickly I was flying through this book. Why was I shocked?
This is perhaps one of the finest survival tales I’ve encountered in some time.
The main character here, Erin, is pregnant and engaged to the supposed man of her dreams, Phillip. Now having moved to a small town to afford to live, they are struggling. Struggling with moving away from friends, struggling with the lack of finances, and struggling with isolation.
The premise is simple enough. They decide to go for a drive, expecting to make it home before the snow storm hits. (Spoiler alert – they don’t!)
Their beat up car dies and as the snow begins, Phillip decides to walk to help. Erin manages one last phone call to her father for help, before the phone dies, leaving her feeling even more alone.
When some time passes and Phillip hasn’t returned and her father hasn’t arrived, that’s when Erin realizes it’s up to her to survive. The cold, the wilderness and the lack of food all crashing in around her, and her swollen belly, the baby kicking, reminding her that its arrival is imminent.
The Mongrel is an easy 5/5 read for me, as a survival story. Watching Erin battle insurmountable odds to try and stay alive had me holding my breath and devouring the words as they came.
The Mongrel, at least in my view, absolutely failed as a werewolf tale. It felt like a throw away portion. If you removed the werewolf portion and put it in a word document, I would suspect it would be less than two paragraphs. Maybe. Might be less than that.
Now don’t get me wrong, this story is absolutely a must read, and I will be recommending it to all who ask. But I won’t be recommending it as a werewolf story, but as a survival story.
If you liked the movie The Grey with Liam Neeson, you have an idea of what you are in for here.
I highly suggest you all take a look and read this. The writing and survival tale are almost untouchable.