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Loading... Last Days (2010)by Brian Evenson
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Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. No current Talk conversations about this book. Publisher describes this as intense and deeply unsettling. I could not agree more. Our protagonist, a detective that had just gone through a traumatic experience - indeed an intense and deeply unsettling one, is co-opted, corrupted and lampooned when he gets involved in a religious cult that takes bodily penance, self-flagellation and the like to its extreme. The cult’s credo is the more body parts a member can chop off, cut off, the better. Ears, fingers, eyes, limbs -anything goes. Self-flagellation? No, Sir. That simply won’t do. Our protagonist is disgusted, and rightly so, since he himself just lost his hand to a hatchet. And he did not volunteer - goes without saying. Soon our detective realizes that there is much more at stake than solve if a murder mystery for a cult of plum-mad religious fanatics. But read for yourself - if you got the stomach. no reviews | add a review
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To find a cult leader's killer, a former detective must literally give up his body in this award-winning work of literary horror. Nominated for the Shirley Jackson award and winner of the ALA/RUSA Best Horror novel, Brian Evenson's Last Days is an intense, profoundly unsettling down-the-rabbit-hole detective noir. Kline is a former detective who's cool head in the face of a brutal amputation makes him the perfect candidate to infiltrate a dark cult that believes amputation brings one closer to God. Kline is tasked with finding the cult leader's killer. But to get to the truth, Kline must lose himself-literally-one body part at a time. Last Days was first published in 2003 as a limited edition novella titled The Brotherhood of Mutilation. Its success led Evenson to expand the story into a full-length novel. In doing so, he has created a work that's disturbing, deeply satisfying, and completely original. No library descriptions found. |
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Google Books — Loading... GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)813.54Literature American literature in English American fiction in English 1900-1999 1945-1999LC ClassificationRatingAverage:
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That's my opinion anyway, and of course, opinions vary. I've read the opposite opinions of many a reviewer online. But me, personally? I love a well thought-out, inventive story. He had so many fantastic ideas, but he seemed to just tease me with them. I would argue that any story in that collection could have been fleshed out into a full-bodied novel, had he the time and/or interest in doing so.
Don't get me wrong, they were amazing, those stories, by themselves. The first one I read, I said to myself, "My God, this guy is an excellent writer!" However, by the end of the collection I found myself wondering if he was just a one-trick pony. An excellent trick, to be sure, but if that's all he has, he's a side show in the circus, not the main attraction.
(I've pushed that metaphor too far. Let's drop it.)
So I wanted to see what one of his novels looked like. Given more space and time, would he dive into the story fully instead of skirting alongside of it? I picked this one because it was the only novel of his for sale in my local bookstore. No other thought was put into it. I tore through it in 2 days.
I absolutely loved it. My former complaint about him not diving completely into a story only sort of applies here. He started with a story (probably best described as a "novella" due to its length) he'd written years earlier called The Brotherhood of Mutilation. Full of fascinating ideas and horrific imagery, it told the tale of a man who gets pulled into a cult based around the idea of self-mutilation as a form of forced spiritual enlightenment. But like so many of his stories, it ended just before the plot could progress towards any sort of conclusion. Evenson likes to leave us hanging, requiring us to fill in our own blanks.
That was written in 2003. In 2009 he decided to write a sequel (or rather a continuation) starting literally where Brotherhood ended and moving the plot along. The second half, called Last Days (thus the title of the novel) introduces its own complementary ideas about this cult, including an offshoot, and a number of new characters, and moves the plot along at a more deliberate and rapid pace than the first half.
Combined, they make almost the perfect novel for me. I say "almost" because I found a few things lacking. Any back story about, quite frankly, any of the characters, among them. And the combination of noir-ish elements and Beckett-esque dialogue didn't work quite as well for me as either of them would have landed on their own. But these are minor quibbles. I've got a couple more Evenson novels on my TBR stack now, and I look forward to plowing through them soon.
Postscript
After thinking about it a bit longer, I can see that he still danced around a larger story. We have almost no sense of the world outside of this cult. We hardly meet any characters not already immersed. We have only a fleeting idea of what happened to the main character, Kline, before the events of this novel. So the question of "what sort of world is it where this kind of cult exists" is never asked or answered. And, yes, maybe that is a larger story that my brain (with its need for answers and gaps filled) would love to read one day. But goddammit at least in this novel he takes a character through a story arc to some sort of conclusion. I'll take my wins where I can get them.
Post-postscript
Did I say these questions are never asked? Color me embarrassed. I remembered the last line of the novel:
Where now? he wondered, at first walking, then loping, then breaking into a run. What next?
I stand corrected. He did ask a couple of the main questions still lingering in my mind. ( )