Sunday, February 16, 2025

Book Review: Model Home by Rivers Solomon

 


Model Home by Rivers Solomon

304 pages, Hardcover

Published October, 2024 by MCD

Rivers Solomon has entered a new territory with this reader. I have read all four of their books and so far I have liked them all. I suppose that puts Solomon in the category of author I will follow in any genre. I should say that my start with this author was a little rough, as I did not enjoy The Unkindness of Ghosts during the reading experience. A curious thing happened as I broke it down for my review, I realized elements at work. More than any other book, writing the review changed my mind on the book. For one thing, I had to let go of my ideas about the genre the book is written in. My ideas of what a generation starship novel didn’t matter and once I accepted that I allowed myself to enjoy it more.

The novella The Deep was good but didn’t completely hook me, but the body-horror superhero tale  Sorrowland rocked my world and probably remains my favorite Solomon novel. That said, Model Home, a true haunted house horror novel is objectively more of a masterwork. Like all of Rivers Solomon's novels they stay with you, you think about them and your perception of the novel grows and changes.  As many haunted house novels as there are it is not a minor feat to do something NEW and IMPORTANT let alone create a masterwork. Here we are - Model Home ticks lots of boxes. 

This novel feels lived in, not quite autobiographical but it is clear the author mined their personal life for events and vibes in this novel. I have nothing besides gut feeling and honestly, I hope not because this is not based on true life events. Why? Because this novel contains some gut-wrenching drama as well as horror. 

Set in Dallas Texas the main characters are a black family who grew up in Oak Creek Estate, a wealthy upper-class gated community. Even though Ezri, Eve, and Emmanuel have left home none of them have an interest in going back. Despite their parents still living there over the years. The siblings become worried when they get strange out-of-character messages from their mother. Ezri comes from England to investigate and find their parents dead in the house. 

Most of the novel is told through Ezri, a character who like the author escaped this country for England. I suppose that is the reason why I suspected elements were autobiographical but I tried to resist that.  

The set-up for a political haunted house novel is so well done by the neighborhood who reject the black family, and the parents who insist on staying to prove a point. (Every haunted house novel has to have a reason the people don’t just leave). The excellently written and realized characters are the last pieces that complete the puzzle.  In the guise of a haunted house novel, Solomon makes statements on child abuse, identity politics and normalized white supremacy.  

“Even when you fight with everything you have to escape the house, it doesn't matter. It doesn't matter, because outside the house, is just as bad as inside the house.” 

 I like the idea that the haunting is as much the parents and their effect on the kids as it was actual ghosts. If you think about it, the actions of parents are the kinda thing that can haunt a person and there is no supernatural anything that has to be involved. I was lucky enough to have good parents but I have known many people who have been basically haunted their entire lives by the actions of one or both parents. That trauma is the haunt in this haunted house. Impressive metaphor and an excellent way to do something new with the genre horror. 

“How cruel that our parents, unexorcisable, go on inside of us. How cruel that we cannot disimbricate their ghosts from our being.”

Model Home has several disturbing moments, including one of the most painfully raw sex scenes I have read in a book.  There are moments with characters of humor and joy that help to create the “Care” in Scare. No idea if horror is a genre Solomon intends to keep working in, but this novel is a masterwork. 

Book Review: Bang Bang Sisters by Rio Youers


 

 Bang Bang Sisters by Rio Youers

400 pages, Hardcover
Published July, 2024 by William Morrow

Rio Youers is an author I have great respect for. After his powerful surreal horror debut Westlake Soul, Youers created a style very much his own over the first couple of novels. Lola on Fire and No Second Chances are like literary Luc Besson movies. The reason I say that is not just the action plotlines but the super vile bad guys that make the books more tense.

Bang Bang Sisters will get many false comparisons, the look on the cover sells a 70s grindhouse vibe, but the women and the band inside the book have a more modern feel.  The Bang Bang Sisters of the title are three women Brea, Jessie, and Flo. With a set-up of A-Team meets Bikini Kill I thought it was a great start. What the dust jacket describes as Blood, Bullets, Rock and Roll. 

The characters are great, not a shock coming from Youers who excels in creating people you want to read about. By night the band travels the country planning small gigs, and off stage they are highly skilled vigilantes.  Alternating with chapters from the point of view of The band members, a serial killer the Wren, and a gangster the BBS pissed off. 

Everything is well written, and perhaps it was timing as I was reading this book just as I got super sick, but I sorta lost the thread or momentum of this book. As much as I liked the set-up, the characters, and even the storyline about the Wren, one of the twists of the book really didn’t work for me.

Using a clue about the Wren as a trap, the BBS is lured to Alabama where Chance Kotter a gangster creates an elaborate plot for revenge that involves a game of survival where the BBS are turned against each other. It was this twist that didn’t work for me. I was vibing on the book until that point. 

Rio Youers is an incredibly talented writer, I think this was on the reader, but I didn’t connect to this book like I did the last two.  Again, I was sick when I read it, and that also put me a bit behind on book reviews, so consider all this. While I didn’t like the final act I could see reading more stories about the Bang Bang Sisters, because Rio Youers is an author I will always read.

 

 

Thursday, February 6, 2025

Book Review: Lost Ark Dreaming by Suyi Davies Okungbowa

 


Lost Ark Dreaming by Suyi Davies Okungbowa 

179 pages, Hardcover
Published May, 2024 by Tordotcom

 I have to admit at the onset that I have fallen way behind in my book reviews as I was sick and also fell behind on some deadlines so my book reviews are not going to be as elaborate as they have been in the past.  Lost Ark Dreaming by Suyi Davies Okungbowa an author who is new to me but this was right up my alley, I like African science fiction, I have an affinity for Nigerian authors and Cli-fi is the subgenre I consider most important. 


The way this book was marketed with a cross-comparison in the cover flap. “The brutally engineered class divisions of Snowpiercer meets Rivers Solomon’s The Deep in this high-octane post-climate disaster novella…”


Set off the coast east Africa when the tides have swallowed much of the coastline, the book is set mostly in towers that reminded me of the underrated Dredd movie written by Alex Garland. The Snowpiecer comparisons come from the class divisions that run through the tower, the connection to Solomon’s The Deep is a bit of spoiler that I am glad I forgot about between the time I put the book on hold and the library and it showed up.


The towers that have sections that are permanently below the sea level works because the Suyi Davies Okungbowa is very good at World-building. The book avoids major information dumps, and the novella feels lived in.  


The characters were not as strong an element for me, but they mostly worked. Yekini being a rookie on a mission going deep into the towers was a smart POV for introductions to the world-building. Tuoyo and Ngozi both play important roles, at times predictable but that also showed me I was sure fire hands structure wise.


There  are a few moments that felt a little more profound than your average SF novel.


“Every story you believe, that you incorporate within the self, decides who you are. And the greatest weapon against freedom is to believe stories that plant a seed in your heart yet have no place growing there.”


The voice of African Sci-fi is varied and no two authors are exactly alike but there is a vibe, and feeling of profound heart in all Nigeria SF that I have read. 


“I love how you say conquer when you mean erase.

Let me borrow from their sayings here: they who rewrite stories are doomed to create monsters.” 


The monsters and heroes of Lost Ark Dreaming exceeded my expectations and I had high ooes. Suyi Davies Okungbowa is a new author to me but one I will keep watching.


“This, friend, is the way the world always ends, has always ended since we have watched it together: with those who Have choosing demise—always demise—for everything but themselves.”

Book Review: The Iron Heel by Jack London

 


 
 

251 pages, Paperback

First published January 1, 1908

Full review coming to Amazing Stories...

Thursday, January 30, 2025

Book Reviews: Cairo in the War by Artemis Cooper

 

 

 Cairo in the War by Artemis Cooper

  368 pages  Paperback

Published November, 2000 by Penguin UK

OK I am way behind on my book reviews, and I genuinely don’t feel the need to write long reviews of non-fiction books…so don’t expect much from the next two books.  I read this book for research for writing an upcoming novel.  I needed to read this for research but the book ended up don’t being super helpful, although it did the trick of teaching me what the region was like during the second WW.

Book Review: When Paris Went Dark: The City of Light Under German Occupation, 1940-44 by Ronald C. Rosbottom

 


When Paris Went Dark: The City of Light Under German Occupation, 1940-44  by Ronald C. Rosbottom

480 pages, Paperback
Published January, 2015 by John Murray

 

OK I am way behind on my book reviews, and I genuinely don’t feel the need to write long reviews of non-fiction books…so don’t expect much from the next two books.  I read this book for research for writing an upcoming novel. It is a fascinating look at nazi occupied France. IT presents many ethical questions I wasn’t expecting. I read it between Trump winning the election and taking over. Accuse me of overreacting but much of it seemed relatable.