Creatures of Want and Ruin

Creatures of Want and Ruin

2018 • 352 pages

Ratings2

Average rating3

15

sigh Well. That sure was a book.

See, that's the thing. It's very obvious that Molly Tanzer is a very capable writer. Her primary characters are well-drawn, she's clearly devoted to capturing the atmosphere of the setting and the period. Tanzer wrote this story as well as she could, but what she was writing just wasn't very interesting.

Ellie is a bootlegger trying to make enough money to send her brother to medical school. Fin (I was deeply confused about this nickname for a while, its short for Delphine and pronounced as such) is a bookish upper class woman who's husband inherited a bunch of money and wants to spend it all partying. Somehow Ellie and Fin and some people they know get tangled up in a plot by a group of racists lead by a so-called reverend to take back Long Island, or whatever, and Reverend Hunter has been using the essence of demon to help him do it. It takes a good long while to get to that point, even though all of the pieces are telegraphed very plainly. It felt very paint-by-numbers with little heart, and by the end I was just going through the motions with them.

I think the main problem is that none of the characters are really going anywhere. Ellie has a goal - send her brother to medical school - and at first that is used pretty well to get her into the good kind of trouble the story needed her to be in. But after that the character's own motivations have to take over - it can't always just be about saving everyone else. But I don't really know how this journey was meaningful to Ellie at all. There was no path she was taking, no change she really experienced. She and her fiance, Gabriel, learn some stuff about their relationship, but honestly I thought they were far too good communicators for two people their age and era. Their emotional maturity made for rather stale reading. I guess she learns to separate herself from the toxicity in her family but, like, she was going to move out anyway.

I think the only thing that I really know about Ellie is that she is really freaking horny, and while I appreciate the healthy polyamory on display here, Ellie ogling other men when she had a perfectly wonderful fiance at home felt very distracting and pointless. It was completely unnecessary for Jones, her cop contact, to be a love interest. Nothing is really revealed about Ellie through their relationship, and its just left hanging at the end.

Fin faired a little better. She had a history that lead to her understanding of the whole demon thing that was unique. She also had a rather unusual home life going on, with her husband and their friends constantly partying and likely sleeping together, while she gets increasingly ignored. The vibe of the scenes with her husband and their friends gave me the impression that they were going to be involved in the overarching plot somehow but, spoiler, apparently they were just set dressing. Bobbie, Fin's former close friend who seemed content to be slowly stealing Fin's husband and upper class life, in particularly had a rather devious vibe to her that I thought was going somewhere. Apparently, a vibe was all it was.

Yeah, I don't know, all I can feel in regards to this book is one big shrug. The characters were there, they did stuff, they used slang that made them sound like they were from the 1920s but mostly they were all way too smart and well-balanced to make the conflicts interesting. The villain was barely even there. There was a lot of forced chemistry, particularly between Fin and Ellie. Tanzer seemed to like mentioning their girlish giggling when a joke or a sarcastic remark or something would have gone a lot further to show they enjoyed each other's sense of humor. I'm giving this two stars because, I mean, it was very readable (as stated Tanzer, is a very good writer), and goddamn I loved Creatures of Will and Temper so much. But the charm and cleverness and style of that book is nowhere near here.

August 12, 2021Report this review