TSS – A little meme for your morning

Most recently seen at: I was a teenage book geek & Bart’s Bookshelf.  Answer the questions with book titles you’ve read this year!

In high school I was: Waiting (Ha Jin)

People might be surprised I’m: Born Round (Frank Bruni)

I will never be: The Maze Runner (James Dashner)

My fantasy job is: Flight (Sherman Alexie)

At the end of a long day I need: Love is the Higher Law (David Levithan)

I hate it when: Flyaway (Suzie Gilbert)
I have lots of flyaways. 

Wish I had: A Year By the Sea (Joan Anderson)

My family reunions are: Remarkable Creatures (Tracy Chevalier)

At a party you’d find me: Runaways (Brian Vaughn)

I’ve never been to: Palestine (Joe Sacco)

A happy day includes: The Sweetness at the Bottom of the Pie (Alan Bradley)

Motto I live by: A Good and Happy Child (Justin Evans)

On my bucket list: Mendoza in Hollywood (Kage Baker)

In my next life I want to be: The Great Perhaps (Joe Meno)

A Good and Happy Child – Justin Evans

Even though I’m not officially participating in RIP this year,  I too have caught the bug.  There is just something about the cooler mornings and evenings, even though the days are still hot, that reminds you that fall and all the goodness that comes with it is just around the corner.  I have been trying to find an engaging horror novel that will not only give me some nightmares, but also keep me interested.  I’ve tried a few and put them all down.  All that was before A Good and Happy Child.

A Good and Happy Child even began with one of my novel pet peeves: 2nd person.  Fortunately I flipped ahead to make sure the entire novel wasn’t in 2nd person and it was not, so I did not mind the few chapters that were.  The novel begins with George Davies revealing to his psychiatrist (the you at the beginning) that he cannot hold his newborn child.  He cannot even go near him, let alone touch him.  His wife, fed up, has requested that he go see the psychiatrist to get some help, or she will leave him.  His psychiatrist requests that George write about something that happened to him as a child in notebooks for the psychiatrist to read later.  Those notebooks make up the bulk of the novel.

After his father dies, George begins to experience weird things.  He sees a small boy who talks to him and tells him to do things, often without George remembering.  Eventually these things get noticed by his mother and his father’s friends, leading to a visit to the mental hospital.

I don’t read a lot of horror novels, but when I do, I want them to have certain qualities.  I want there to be ambiguity; I want the reader to have to decide if what happened was real or not.  Were there actually demons?  Or was it all in the main character’s head?  I don’t like it when the book itself makes a judgement one way or another and A Good and Happy Child delivered on this aspect.  The events are terrifying, yes, but since they are memories from a childhood there is always that possibility that they are not real.  But!  There is always the possibility they are.  That’s what makes it so scary.

The setting also has to be perfect.  I particularly loved the setting of A Good and Happy Child because it was Virginia and there is plenty of creepy to go around in my home state.  Though the university setting of most of the book  is fiction, it is easy to replace it with real locations in the area.

The structure is important as well.  It has to build suspense and create tension.  I think if the novel had been told from the perspective of Young George it would not have been successful as Adult George telling the story.  There is the added element of faulty memory.

If you can’t tell, I really really liked this novel.  No, it’s not going to shatter any literary circles.  The writing is not necessarily beautiful, but it is well-written and extremely successful.  (Also, I had nightmares.  Bonus points.)  More bonus points?  This is Evans’s first novel.  This is a perfect RIP read and a perfect read for Halloween.

So go read this!: now | tomorrow | next week | next month | next year | when you’ve exhausted your TBR pile

Other reviews: books i done read.

Did you read and review A Good and Happy Child? Let me know in the comments and I will link you here!