Book Review: Two for One

I’m enough of a dork to be a frequent visitor on Reddit. One of the sub-Reddits that I like to visit is called “horrorlit.” In this space, horror fans will ask for and receive book recommendations. I recently came across a post where the OP was requesting books with an unreliable narrator. I thought this was interesting. So, I took a look myself, and grabbed some of the titles to read. I ran through two such books fairly quickly. Because I read them back-to-back, I am reviewing them together, in this double book review post. Enjoy!

Book Review #1

I’m Thinking of Ending Things

I will start by reviewing Iain Reid’s I’m Thinking of Ending Things. It’s worth noting that there is a Netflix series made from this book. I’ve not seen the series. So, I won’t make any comparisons there. The plot of the book is simple, on the surface. It’s a journey/travel novel. A lot of the action takes place in a car, or at places that are unknown to the protagonist.

Book Review Cover

Once you reach the end, it’s hard to say whether the narrator is unreliable or not. Are they really that unreliable? Or are they simply playing out a fantasy? Do they believe the fantasy? Or do they understand everything that happened? You have to decide. The ending is not ambiguous, but the reliability or unreliability of the narrator, in my opinion, is up for debate.

The prose is incredibly precise, and the book is a work of art unto itself. Yes, I picked it out of a horror literature forum, and that’s probably where it’s shelved in a bookstore. However, based off of the character-driven plot and the beauty of the prose, this book is very likely considered literary.

If you are reading this book as a writer, and you are looking precisely at how to write unreliable narrators, this is a great book to read.

Book Review #2

A Head Full of Ghosts

So the next review, Paul Tremblay’s A Head Full of Ghosts, is a very different tale from the first. This one is the story of a crumbling family. There is a mentally ill sister, a suddenly religious father, a stressed mother, and a little sister who is witness. In addition to this, there is a camera crew who is there to record the family’s undoing.

Book Review Cover

This story is one that wants you to ask questions from the start. It invites you to try and figure out what’s going on. The argument for the unreliability of the narrator is made because she’s young.

But the narrator presents herself as reliable, and the readers never find any reason not to trust her. Even at the end, where the audience learns that things happened differently than everyone would have believed in the world of the book, she still doesn’t appear, to me, at least; to be an untrustworthy narrator.

Conclusion

At the end of the day, if you are looking to write something with an unreliable narrator. It is important to present evidence for the readers that shows the differences between the world the character sees, and the way things actually are.

In, I’m Thinking of Ending Things, the title itself has two meanings. By the end of the book, the tragedy of the whole thing crashes down on the reader. How much do I misunderstand? How much of a life can pass a person by? In A Head Full of Ghosts, much of the misunderstandings can be explained either by the youngness of the narrator, or by the fact that she wouldn’t have been told certain things, etc.

Both books are excellent examples of their genre. Both are stories worth reading, but only one has a truly unreliable narrator, even though they are both first person, which does mean that the narrators will be unreliable–to a degree.

Thank you for reading! Let me know if you enjoyed this double book review and if you would like to see more of this, or if you’d like to see something different. Thank you!

Survive The Night Book Review

I came across Danielle Vega as an author on social media. She was in a list of female horror authors, one of many. I wrote her down, and made a goal to check her writing out, along with the others on the list. I checked out Survive the Night from my local library on my Kindle. Not only that, but I went into the book “blind,” having not looked at any other reviews, or even what the book was about, I liked the name and the cover. Here is my Survive the Night book review.

Photo by Bruno Thethe

This book is YA. I didn’t expect it going in. I should have known that there is young adult horror, but for some reason, I just didn’t. The main features of this book are: the protagonist’s pain, her addiction (although, I would argue that she almost has that forced on her) and toxic friendship, and a big ol’ monster. Let’s look at these one-by-one:

Pain

The protagonist (Casey) and her pain is something that is ever-present in the story. It takes a backseat, but colors her worldview as she moves throughout the tale. She grits her teeth against it, she fights it, it almost gets her, it is the thing that nearly wins. Her pain is a shadow, a monkey-on-her-back. It’s another character.

Survive the Night Book Review

Survive the Night Cover

Addiction

The story of Casey’s addiction is told through memory. WSe know this story is about addiction from the beginning, but we only see her addiction through flashes. It makes us wonder, is she really addicted? Or did her parents overreact like she keeps on saying, it layers the story with that infamous unreliable narrator feeling. Is she addicted, or does she only think she is? How can someone so young be addicted to something besides their phone?

Toxic Friendship

The heart of this story lives in the friendship between Casey and Shana. It takes minutes to realize that Shana is not a good person. This part of the story, along with the strange romance between Casey and her ex-boyfriend, reminded me why I don’t read YA anymore. However, the toxic relationship, one that you would hope would only happen during those teen-years was heartbreaking, yet relatable. Shana and her larger-than-life antics, her “look at me” ways, reminds all of us of people we know or knew. Their relationship is the one that kept the pages turning.

The Monster

Why pick up a horror novel if there isn’t going to be something horrific? This book certainly delivers. Although the simple prose may not have been something that I was expecting (that’s what I get for not knowing anything about the book beforehand). The monster lurking in the water, something straight out of a Lovecraft story, was something beyond any kind of hopes I had for the novel. I was thinking of a knife-wielding killer, but to get an actual monster? It was so much more than I could have hoped for.

I would say that this is a book for you if you are an actual teenager. Better yet, if you are a female teen who likes scary novels, this book would be a wonderful read. Or, I guess, if you are a writer of teenaged scary novels, this book would be a good read for you. That concludes my Survive the Night book review. Here’s a link to buy it, if you’re interested: Survive the Night