Special thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for a free, electronic ARC of this novel received in exchange for an honest review.
Expected publication date: January 10, 2023
Novelist Ben Bookman (killer name for an author by the way) wrote his novel, The Scarecrow, over the course of one weekend spent alone in his family’s rundown (and creepy) family estate. During a release tour, a fan commits suicide during a book signing, claiming Bookman was able to “see his nightmares”. Then, people in and around Ben’s small community are being brutally murdered- in the exact ways that are portrayed in the novel. Police begin to question Ben, looking for a connection, but Ben knows that some of his secrets can’t come out, whatever the cost.
J.H. Markert’s first horror novel, “The Nightmare Man”, is a hodgepodge of different elements- first, Ben’s family history with his grandfather, the man known to “stop nightmares”, which leads to Ben’s chosen profession. Then, there’s the history behind the manor house itself, which has its own deep, dark secrets hidden behind the walls. The police investigator, Mills, has his own history with nightmares, that only get worse as the investigation continues, leading to even more tension with him and his daughter, also a police officer. Markert has a lot of ideas in one novel, and although each and every one of them were deliciously spooky and entertaining, they didn’t seem to gel together until the first third of the book.
I wanted more of the Bookman family history with their “capturing nightmares”, more of the history behind the manor and more of Mills’ background, not just with his estranged daughter but throughout his childhood. “The Nightmare Man” had enough juice in it to power a series of novels instead of just one, and I wish Markert had turned this into a multi-novel series (which is something I rarely say). I wanted more of everything! Luckily, Markert managed to focus on enough of the spooky plot points to keep me reading, and I was pulled in from the start, desperate to know how it ended.
There are a lot of characters in this novel, which can sometimes be difficult to sort through, especially with all the familial relationships, but it’s worth the effort. The novel is narrated by Mills and Ben alternatively, with segments from the “before” (before the two merged paths following the investigation), which builds up tension while providing a bit of background knowledge and character development.
“The Nightmare Man” is something straight out of a Stephen King novel (except in this case, a J.H. Markert) and I definitely think that Markert is making a name for himself in horror fiction. I eagerly look forward to having more novels to haunt my dreams!