Apple, Massachusetts is rotten to the core.
Every fall, when the orchards ripen and the leaves begin to die, there are murders. We know it, and we accept it. It's the price we pay for living in Apple. Families mourn, but no one is ever caught. Now, there's a body in the woods, and the cycle is starting again. People bruise easily in Apple.
Finding a murdered and mutilated girl plunges Jackson Gill into the middle of a decades-old horror. For Jackson, the newest murders become personal. His mentally ill sister knows far more about the murders than anyone restrained in a basement room should know.
When one by one, her sick, cryptic predictions prove true, Jackson will have to believe the unthinkable and stop what no one has been able to stop in sixty years.
He has no choice. He lives in Bloody Bloody Apple.
BLOODY BLOODY APPLE by Howard Odentz is far darker than I could have imagined. Told through the POV of teenager Jackson, the savage history of Apple is revealed, as well as the twisted secrets each family hides behind closed doors. With the level of dysfunction among so many households, it's no wonder the annual murders are accepted as normal.
This year, the victims are all people connected to Jackson in some way, and his sister seems to know something about the killings, despite being chained up in their basement. However, the crime scenes pale in comparison to his personal life. This novel is a horror story within a mystery-thriller, and Jackson is the only one who might be able to piece the puzzle together, if his family secrets don't break him first.
I recommend this story to anyone who enjoys psychological horror, but I have to warn readers: there are a LOT of triggers in this book. This story gave me plenty of nightmares.
As always,
AstraDaemon
Welcome to the Lair!
Exploring dark alleys. Discovering new nightmares.
Revisiting the masters.
Showing posts with label What We Kill. Show all posts
Showing posts with label What We Kill. Show all posts
Tuesday, April 21, 2020
Poisoned Roots
Keyword Search:
AstraDaemon,
AstraDaemon's Lair,
Bloody Bloody Apple,
Bones,
Bottle Toss,
folklore,
horror,
Howard Odentz,
mystery-thriller,
novel,
review,
Snow,
supernatural,
suspense,
What We Kill
Monday, January 27, 2020
Supernatural Mystery-Thriller
BOTTLE TOSS by Howard Odentz is a very strange tale about a 17 year old boy who lives with a foster family. Denny notices sinister events unfolding around his town, after his sister's boyfriend tosses a bottle at a passing car.
I honestly thought I was reading a story about a group of pedophile werewolves who worship a goat-demon, for the longest time. Poor Denny is surrounded by so much weird activity, as well as several dysfunctional characters, I couldn't imagine what else would explain all the missing and dead people.
Odentz doesn't reveal anything, until Denny finally confesses the secret he has been keeping, at the very end. While I love this novel, I'm not particularly happy with the way some characters are dealt with. Some didn't deserve their fates, and others should have been made to suffer even more.
I also recommend WHAT WE KILL by Howard Odentz.
As always,
AstraDaemon
I honestly thought I was reading a story about a group of pedophile werewolves who worship a goat-demon, for the longest time. Poor Denny is surrounded by so much weird activity, as well as several dysfunctional characters, I couldn't imagine what else would explain all the missing and dead people.
Odentz doesn't reveal anything, until Denny finally confesses the secret he has been keeping, at the very end. While I love this novel, I'm not particularly happy with the way some characters are dealt with. Some didn't deserve their fates, and others should have been made to suffer even more.
I also recommend WHAT WE KILL by Howard Odentz.
As always,
AstraDaemon
Keyword Search:
AstraDaemon,
Bones,
Bottle Toss,
folklore,
horror,
Howard Odentz,
mystery-thriller,
review,
short story,
Snow,
supernatural,
suspense,
What We Kill
Tuesday, December 3, 2019
Bloody Stumps
WHAT WE KILL by Howard Odentz is a mystery-thriller centered on four friends who can't remember the night before:
One has a triangle burned into his forearm.
One has lost her pants.
One is missing his glass eye.
The last is covered in blood.
As images of big, black eyes and the cries of sheep haunt their addled brains, the town fire alarm and police sirens can be heard in the distance.
What is happening to them? What is happening to their pristine town?
What's more, why can't they remember any of it?
What . . . what did they do?
Even though the story moves at a steady pace, alternating bits and pieces of memory with backstories of their adolescent lives is quite maddening. I read the book in one sitting because I had to know what in the hell happened to them. The ending is completely worth the effort. I think this story would make a great movie.
At first, I couldn't stand the narrator's constant need to explain their family situations and relationships with one another, but when a huge secret is revealed towards the end, I understood why the author laid out every detail of their personal issues.
Odentz has a special gift for mixing young people and family drama into horrifying stories, in the most surprising ways. Not only do I recommend this novel, I also suggest reading his stories, SNOW and BONES.
As always,
AstraDaemon
One has a triangle burned into his forearm.
One has lost her pants.
One is missing his glass eye.
The last is covered in blood.
As images of big, black eyes and the cries of sheep haunt their addled brains, the town fire alarm and police sirens can be heard in the distance.
What is happening to them? What is happening to their pristine town?
What's more, why can't they remember any of it?
What . . . what did they do?
Even though the story moves at a steady pace, alternating bits and pieces of memory with backstories of their adolescent lives is quite maddening. I read the book in one sitting because I had to know what in the hell happened to them. The ending is completely worth the effort. I think this story would make a great movie.
At first, I couldn't stand the narrator's constant need to explain their family situations and relationships with one another, but when a huge secret is revealed towards the end, I understood why the author laid out every detail of their personal issues.
Odentz has a special gift for mixing young people and family drama into horrifying stories, in the most surprising ways. Not only do I recommend this novel, I also suggest reading his stories, SNOW and BONES.
As always,
AstraDaemon
Keyword Search:
AstraDaemon,
Bones,
dark humor,
folklore,
horror,
Howard Odentz,
review,
short story,
Snow,
suspense,
What We Kill
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)


