After the sudden, and albeit mysterious, death of his son, John Henderson's life comes undone. He and his wife separate, he leaves their beautiful modern-mansion-like home and moves far away to reinvent himself with a life that is full of day-to-day necessities and nothing else. Three years after the tragedy that stripped his life bare, John receives an anonymous email from someone who claims to know what happened to his son, forcing him to return to the town he swore he had left behind and pick apart a mystery he was ready to let fade. But it's John's return to the dark town of Black Ridge that unleashes a sequence of events that corrupt everything he ever knew of his past life.
From the cover and title, I thought I was onto a winner with Bad Things. I had never heard of Michael Marshall before, but everything about this novel looked severely promising for me. However, halfway through the book, I fell instantly out of any love for this book as I realised that it posed as a thriller but failed to mention any supernatural elements on the blurb... I love supernatural things as much as the next person, I enjoy horror movies with a haunting supernatural twist and sometimes find myself delving into the worlds of the unknown through documentaries or other forms of media. But when it comes to books, I rarely like a book that has any supernatural elements... and here's why: it becomes a scapegoat. All of the thrilling things that you imagine happening suddenly don't have a villain or a justifiable answer. It's like the dreaded, "and they woke up and it was all just a dream..." ending that everyone prays to avoid.
With that being said - I still read through the book in a handful of sittings and there were parts that I did enjoy. With the first chapter, I was pulled in, drawn into the tragedy the Henderson family had experienced in what appeared to be their otherwise perfect lifestyle! It was a shocking start that promised a heartbreaking and adrenaline-fuelled novel. However, the pacing then became to feel very slow as the plot took it's time to unravel. And while there were moments that were dramatic and full of action, they were also paired with thoughts of "okay, but why is this happening?". When John went out of his way to help his bosses daughters' drug-dealer boyfriend, and cough up thousands to help - I rolled my eyes. Yes, a nice gesture - but I couldn't help but remember that John had one surviving child and an ex-wife he didn't appear to have anything to do with.
And when John was eventually in Black Ridge and some of the town's hidden secrets began to unfold, I started to enjoy the book again. There were tales and subplots that enticed me, but they seemed to fizzle into nothing. On the other hand, when I realised that the book was relying heavily on a supernatural element, I wasn't sucked into any of the subplots as much as I would've been usually. I felt like the weirdness, strange deaths and unique tragedies could all be written off. The only times when I gasped or felt like it was getting good was when there were physical elements to some of the horrors; with men following some of the characters, windows being broken and people being snatched from their homes.
When it came to the climax of John's adventure, I was far from gripped. I sort of just wanted it to be over. The chase went on for too long, the characters were unlikeable for me throughout the entire story and I felt like I didn't connect with any of them. And when it came to summarising all of the characters after the events, I was uninterested.
Overall, Bad Things was...bad for me. The idea of a cursed town is great, the idea of someone going around and causing emotional distress on people for a price is interesting - but it wasn't what I signed up for when I picked up this 'stunning new psychological thriller'.