Disappearance at Devil's Rock

Disappearance at Devil's Rock

2016 • 341 pages

Ratings31

Average rating3.8

15

This year I challenged my partner to nominate five books of hers that I should read. She tends to read more towards the horror side of the spectrum whilst I tend to favour Fantasy and Sci-Fi. The first book that she nominated was this one - Disappearance at Devil's Rock. Straight out I can say that I was impressed.

This one is a bit of a slow burn. It deals with the disappearance of a child and the agony of not knowing what has happened. This is some powerful stuff. To me, where the book really excels is in the day to day mundanity of living that still goes on whilst the world feels like it is crashing down around you in a situation such as this. The slow gradual reveal of what happened feels very true to many a missing persons case. This slow grinding pace really sets up the payoff for the reveal at the end.

This is psychological horror - any supernatural elements are negligible and easily explained away. This leads to a horrifying believability to the story. Ultimately the biggest monsters are usually humans and this does not back away from that truth.

A final note, the edition that I had the pleasure of reading was the fabulous SST one. The artwork and production quality was fantastic!

January 10, 2021Report this review