No way around that, this is a strange book. I get the string of 1* reviews that you see for this one, as snobbish as it sounds this is very much a not-for-everybody-book. I was lucky enough to find it utterly fascinating and absorbing. I was going through a few dnfs and books that didn't hold my attention and this one did with its strange concept. It's a book to ponder and think about, by no means am I going to claim I fully understood everything that is going on here, just enough to make it interesting. It's vague and ominous and disturbing and uncomfortable and who ever called this funny (as on the blurb and in several descriptions?) must've read a different book. Satirical, maybe, funny, no. It's dark and told in a very weird voice. But so fascinating, that is really the word to settle on for me. Saying this was good or enjoyable is the wrong ruling but it was incredibly fascinating. Also, in case the Horror label drives you in, be aware this is on the literary side, very character driven and a very unusual take on Horror, more Horror adjacent than a scary tale per se. But given the distinct atmosphere present here, it is maybe the perfect transition book into official spooky season, so at least there is that.
As a central theme this is about violence and teenagehood. Different levels of violence, the terror, the dread. Internal violence in form of mental disorders, outward violence committed against others but also themselves, experienced violence, violation of privacy and intimacy, the apathy towards violent thoughts and acts. Some implied, some on page. Is violence an inherent part of the limbo like existence as a teenager, before you really know who you are? Do teenagers understand what happens to them when they act violent? Are they drawn to it? Is it the natural response to a violent world? This book is less an explanation of violence but more of an exploration, a thought spiral about it. Within all this talk on violence is a lot of mundanity, most highlighted by a specific character who sneaks into another teenager's basement and just lives there for something like 18 days, mostly doing nothing. Apathy next to violence. Oh, this book is so fascinating. It reminded me distantly of Bret Easton Ellis, one for the themes but also for the approach to character writing. For the bleak outlook. Also, maybe Larocca fans? I think the vibes connect.
The most notable thing about "String Follow" is the narration though. It is told by an omniscient voice, a bodiless entity that floats around this group of teens we follow: it infiltrates, observes, possesses, maybe guides, maybe feeds off fears and violence, maybe stirs fears and violence, maybe just witnesses. It's hard to pin this down and I wouldn't be surprised if there are a few different interpretations floating around. But it delivers a very unnerving tone, for many pages not that much even happens but this voice always makes you feel like something unsettling could happen around every corner. That combined with being introduced to a bigger cast makes the first ~40 pages a bit rough. I wasn't sold from the get go, the beginning is overwhelming. But I let it work on me, it literally felt hypnotizing to gradually fall into this style and then let it carry me for 400 pages. So, so fascinating, and yes, disturbing.
For a while I thought this story would head towards a school shooting situation but it's not. School shootings are mentioned though and part of a storyline. Very fitting as a symbolizer for the world these teens grow up in, find themselves in. Generally, there are a lot of terrible things that can happen to teenagers and terrible acts that teenagers can commit represented here. It frames the teenage existence in harsh truths, how can we even expect them to respond with anything other than violence of their own choosing? Seriously, I have a ton of thoughts about what this book is laying out but I will admit I am not 100% sure what the book's own statement is by the end. And maybe that is the point. There is no answer, there is no point and purpose. It happens, we live with it for better or worse. There is punk and death parties and basement invasions. It's a lot and I was sucked in.
The ending left me a bit weirded out though. Is that suddenly a religious message? On the last page a character walks into a church, he is lost in several ways, and decided to listen. And I definitely thought that was an odd and for me personally not welcome turn to finish the book. But maybe that church is supposed to represent further indoctrination? I am very confused by what is being said here and wish I could have left the book on a clearer note. But I think I am asking the wrong book for a an easy exit note.
Let me leave you with a quote that gives a solid impression of what to expect:
"Sarah couldn't put it all together -there was a dissonance where the revelation should be, a gulf she was just shy of crossing- but she knew there was violence there, there was violence all around them, buried in those shadows."