D&C 25:12 For my soul delighteth in the song of the heart; yea, the song of the righteous is a prayer unto me, and it shall be answered with a blessing upon their heads.
Sunday, March 29, 2015
Wednesday, March 25, 2015
Review: In the Woods by Tana French
I’ve been avoiding writing here simply because I thought I
had nothing to say.
Anyone who knows me is laughing right now.
But still, I wanted to ease myself back into this routine,
and I thought a book review would be an easy, enjoyable way to renew the habit
of writing.
So, let’s get to it, shall we?
I have just finished the first novel by an author I have
never read before. (I’m a little behind—she published it in 2007.) Tana
French’s In the Woods is a murder
mystery—a genre I admittedly spend little time reading. Many of them are too
predictable for my taste, and even the good ones are rarely emotional,
romantic, or descriptive enough for me.
I’ve been very wrong, and I have a lot of reading to make
up.
French’s use of words is delicious. The details are
distilled down to only the most vivid, the most important, and presented to the
reader through a delightfully neurotic, potentially unreliable narrator. Within
the first few paragraphs, Detective Rob Ryan explains to the reader “two
things: I crave truth. And I lie.”
A careful reader will see clues along the way. But are you
sure you can trust the interpretation of those clues? Is it your interpretation
or Detective Ryan’s? Can we trust him to tell us the truth even in his own
story? Those questions kept me glued to the book. Even now, having finished it,
I am still going over the details, asking myself what I missed the first time,
what should I have seen coming, what is the truth? Ooh, I have shivers just
thinking about it. Emotions soar and plunge, tension is thick, and sympathy for
the characters wars with frustration at their blindness and blunders.
However, I cannot give this book a whole-hearted
recommendation for a few reasons. This is most certainly an adult read. The
subject matter is gruesome in places, and the language is harsh and, in my
opinion, gratuitious. There are many
instances of strong swearing, and both crimes and motivations are described in
some detail. If you are looking for a light-hearted, tidy mystery where good is
always good and utterly triumphant, this is not
the book for you. If you want a romantic adventure where hearts are always
whole in the end, you should probably look elsewhere.
If you are a fan of twisted, intense, wholly absorbing
mystery where characters are deeply flawed, and the lines between good and bad
can be blurry; if you don’t mind language and aren’t averse to serious and
realistic situations; if you crave the exquisite pleasure of dark, tempting,
and terrifying brushes with the unknown—perhaps this is the perfect choice for
your next read.
Rating: 3.5
Language: Adult—extreme and graphic
Romance: Maladjusted
Resolution: Realistic, Partial
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)