Lovecraft Country
2016 • 300 pages

Ratings109

Average rating4

15

A collection of interrelated short stories with a Lovecraftian feel. Not my genre, but an OK book. Overall the stories had just a little hint of the weird and very little of the horror. Not all have the same quality.

I liked the first and last one the most. I did not like the end though. First, it was a happy ending. Lovecraft stories shouldn't have a happy ending. They should convey hopelessness and despair when you realized you're faced with forces beyond your comprehension and despite of all your efforts, the best thing you can do is go mad in order to cope with them.

The second thing was the fate of Braithwhite. It was appropriate but undeserving I think. Undeserving because despite his manipulative demeanor, he was the only white person that treated the black characters as human beings. Not only that, he highly favored them, giving them protection, money and even putting his services as wizard available in order to improve their lives. Appropriate because the main characters were simple, God fearing, poor, country folk. They resented Mr. Braithwhite because he was white, rich and dealing with 'satanic forces'. More importantly, they couldn't see that he was doing his best to keep them safe, and it was other people that wanted to see them harmed. He had no choice but to force himself into their lives.

October 3, 2017Report this review