Ratings28
Average rating4
Something terrifying waits in the decaying Victorian house on the coast, something that has haunted two men since they were children, something that may be ready to kill...again.
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Bask on the hot sand
maybe peek in some windows
dabble in witchcraft.
This is more about feel, atmosphere, and characters than pure horror. However, when the horror comes, it's definitely effective and refreshingly weird. Overall I give it 3.5 stars, rounded up.
My favorite part was the perfect evocation of lazy summer days at a beach house, coupled with the sinister background fact that they're terribly isolated and literally cut off from civilization and help much of the time. This is definitely THE horror novel to save for a beach vacation (if you think you'll be able to sleep after sitting in the sand reading it)!
The other really cool element was the Weirdness. The house being swallowed by a dune, the unexplained rituals Odessa does, and India's photos of the house are all deliciously creepy and unsettling. I have no objection to crumbling Gothic manors in England as the setting for horror stories, but one set on the Alabama shore among the summer houses of a filthy rich family is pleasantly novel. And the sun, sand, and heat do not detract one iota from the horror - they add to it.
One thing that did detract slightly for me - this is a slow build. There is a macabre event in the very beginning, but then most of the book is about the characters, the family, and how they interact. It's well past the halfway point that we get to the serious scares. But the writing about the family is good, and it was still interesting even if it wasn't directly tied to horror.
I also disliked the depiction of Odessa as the quintessential Magical Black Woman. She's an essential character in a way, but she's mostly a plot device rather than a person. Even how she's referred to underlines that she's a bit less of a person than the other (white) characters. She's consistently referred to as “the black woman,” rather than “Odessa” or simply “the woman” or “she” - there are 39 instances of the phrase in the book and it was both grating and disrespectful. Luckily Odessa has one funny, lampshading line near the end where she asks why all the family keep looking to her for answers when she doesn't know more than they do, beyond some intuitions.
On the flip side of social progress and cultural awareness - I really enjoyed the portrayal of Luker. He's clearly gay, but the text only gestures at the fact. The book depicts the necessary secrecy and invisibility of homosexuality that prevailed in the 1980s by recreating it in the prose. So we hear that Luker is happily divorced, that he vacations on Fire Island, and that he spends some time in town visiting a man who has “shared interests.” One sees McDowell (who had been in a committed relationship with a man for over a decade at the date of publication) putting some of himself in the story, with a sympathetic portrait of a gay man as a fully fleshed out, three-dimensional character. It's nice.
Overall, this is an excellent entry in Southern Gothic literature. Even with some flaws, I recommend it to anyone who wants some Southern family weirdness capped off with effective supernatural weirdness.
McDowell has got that sweet balance between atmospheric and supernatural horror down to an art. This book kept me on the edge of my seat almost the whole way through and I thoroughly enjoyed myself. The Elementals is basically architectural horror a la [b:House of Leaves 24800 House of Leaves Mark Z. Danielewski https://i.gr-assets.com/images/S/compressed.photo.goodreads.com/books/1403889034l/24800.SX50.jpg 856555] meets a touch of Edgar Allan Poe and a good dash of Stephen King.The McCray and Savage families have always been inseparable - for generations, they have been neighbours in Beldame, Alabama, owning Victorian houses in the remote small peninsula that is occasionally cut off from the rest of the town by high tide. But there's also a third house next to theirs, supposedly unoccupied through the decades or centuries and now threatening to be eroded by the sand dune that has built up next to it. When the Savage matriarch, Marian Savage, passes away suddenly, the families decides to go back to Beldame to recover and pick up the pieces of their individual relationships. But the sand gets everywhere.The suspense and horror in this book was exquisite. It doesn't rely so much on jumpscare or graphic moments, but slowly builds up a creepy sense of uneasiness that something isn't quite right, before occasionally plunging you into an EEEK! moment. There were moments in this book that actually elicited a hair-raising response from me and for that, this is already a 5 star. I was even a little spooked to be reading this at 3.30am and being the last one awake in the house.At the same time, the premise of this book isn't just... ghosts. There's something a bit more complex than that, and it keeps the book fresh and interesting. There's clearly a haunted house in the book, but what exactly is haunting it? Without going too much into spoilers, I'll just say that McDowell keeps you guessing right till the end. It's an interesting concept that would certainly ruminate in my mind for a while to come.Overall, I cannot but highly recommend this book for fans of architectural and atmospheric horror, or really just anyone looking for a thoroughly spooky read.