Trigger Warning for sexual assault of minors, humans being mauled by animals, death and/or abduction of children, and suicide. This review discusses, briefly, these elements of the story.
My first thought when reading this was "wow this sounds so bloody pretentious!" Though I couldn't intially place why I was so revolted by the writing style, it became clearer when I encountered footnotes. (Yes, actual footnotes to provide extra, in-universe context!) Once I realized this was in the format of a faux documentary essay, the pompousness of the tone made sense. Unfortunately, however, making sense does not equal suddenly becoming tolerable or entertaining.
I only endured this one because it was so short and I was a little curious what the so-called "Bloody Summer" entailed, but I feel like it was a complete waste of my time. The dry (and often self-superior) tone of the format does no justice to what otherwise might have been an intriguing or creepy idea for a horror story.
There's so much potential! As it stands, however, there's little to no intrigue and the detached handling of heavy topics makes this story almost seem exploitative or disrespectful of them. See, if I'm being completely honest, I have no clue what I just read or what its point was - if there even was one - and that is not a good feeling to have after being subjected to a tale that includes (in faux-nonfiction fashion) topics such as widespread child molestation, public mockery and shaming of a potential assault victim, and young people committing suicide.
In fact, the only time any of this is covered with any amount of emotional impact it's to emphasize the narrator's shock and horror at learning of what happened. No time is taken to even mention the impact on the victims, one of whom speaks of the events in a detached way in an interview. It's all about how horrified and sick the interviewer (also the narrator) feels - dramatically jumping up, fleeing, and all.
Do I really need to explain why this leaves me feeling uneasy and wondering what the point of including these sorts of elements even was?
Idk, man, this is a hot mess that uses the guise of academia to try and get away with extreme uncertainties, contradictory details, and a complete and utter lack of depth. That's the most I can gather from what I read, though admittedly my eyes glazed over at some point while reading due to the dull format. The most interesting part is the end, in the form of an interview transcript, but even that is a very low bar considering the issues mentioned above regarding subject matter. There is no sense of comeuppance, no sense of mystique, not even a sense of gravitas because we don't know any of the characters and the writing is so detached.
If the author was aiming to somehow make supernatural maybe-shapeshifting tigers uninteresting and tales of child victims getting revenge incredibly boring, this was an astounding success! But since I doubt those were the goals, I'm going to count this one as a dud. All it did was bore me for the first two-thirds then annoy me in the final stretch.
I wish this were so much more than what it is, because I can see the story begging to be told but it's held back by the format.