In fiction, the most infamous hotel is, for me, The Overlook Hotel. Synonymous with horror for many reasons, not least for it's terrifying ability to smother it's residents in soul-sucking fear, Stephen King created a truly horrific location, one we could all relate to and remember thirty years on. After all, every Premier Inn stay - and I mean every single one - has me checking the hallways for tricycles and twin girls. I don't think I'm alone in this either. However, I haven't read a hotel based horror like The Shining in some time. Motels: sure, everyone dies in them on a fictional weekly basis, but when was the last time an actual hotel was so petrifying?
The Haunted Halls, my first read of Glenn Rolfe, is a horror tale that draws from old school themes and simple scares, then ramps them up to a degree of intensity unseen in many horrors. Telling the tale of two desk clerks at The Bruton Inn, who must deal with the paranormal goings on in their workplace, the story is one that is cool and calm in execution, but vicious and brutal in technique.
The best thing about the book is the style of writing. For me, it's comfortable; the characters and scenes are written in such a style that you feel like you belong in the book. To explain, you'll turn over fifty pages before you realise you're that far in. I was immersed, putting it down for a coffee. When I returned and checked the page count, I was stunned. An author who has this style of writing is rare; one who can pull you in effortlessly and keep you entertained for hours with great story telling, characters and horror prose that hits all the right notes. Almost like Stephen King himself...
Which is where the horror comes in. Happy and hooked on the characters, Rolfe unleashes the lead villain; the hotel itself. Violent, bloody, the stuff of nightmares. Some of the scenes in THH are textbook horror. However, as the saying goes, there are no new ideas, only old ideas redone. Rolfe takes a few scenes of familiarity - and several of original brilliance - and weaves them into a dark tale that has depth, history and gravitas. Sure, we might have seen some of it before, but we haven't seen it done to such startling effect. Scared and amazed all at once, I shot along to the ending of the book in record time, not once looking away from the page. Once, the wife even tapped me on the shoulder and I jumped...I was that involved.
5* - Totally. This book is number 4 on my Top Ten for 2014...expect a blog post very soon. Horror is an art form that requires patience, passion and love for the craft...Rolfe has these in abundance, based on the effort here. Creepy, darkly humorous, and absolutely terrifying - yet smart and intelligent, not to mention character driven, there's a lot going on here that will appeal to the masses. Part Laymon, part King, complete Rolfe, this is a book that any horror fan needs to read. Essential.