Ratings2
Average rating4.5
I won the special edition hardcover during a Twitter giveaway and decided to bump it up my TBR to add another read in for May. The hardcover has this great cover art, and the chapter pages had a nice fox image to match the story.
This is a grief horror that mixes backwoods magic with a story of revenge. Our main character is seeking vengeance for wrongs done to her family, but she doesn’t want to do so alone. Therefore she uses her herbal magic and an undead fox to bring back part of the soul of her father. I enjoyed as the story unpeeled how the magic was done, using water from behind the family home, and herbs from where he was buried to link the ceremony together.
But how much he remembers, and how well he will take this resurrection into the body of an animal, are up in the air. And will he be an accessory to the vengeance, or the unwanted voice of reason?
In a short number of pages, the author does a great job of creating such a bleak world and atmosphere. In that way, it reminded me of one of my favorite zombie reads, Worse Than Dying by Brett Van Valkenburg. While Undead Folk is post apocalyptic, there hasn’t been an entire eradication of the human race, though humanity can be awfully dark. Our main has to face this darkness, while trying to manage her own grief, and certainly some darkness of her own, all in the name of survival.
While this does take the reader through different phases of the main’s grief, I was surprised that it was a bit less sad than I was expecting, but then again, it did have a big focus on revenge. Either way, it certainly sits on the shelf of grief horror with the likes of Clay McLeod Chapman’s latest, Stay on the Line.
The cover immediately spoke to me, after all I do have a tattoo of a Skelanimal fox so undead fox? Sign me up, no need to read the blurb I'm already sold. That being said, it represents the book very well so if you like that vibe you'll probably like the book too.
The world building was very effective and honestly I want more in that world. The writing style was most pleasant and I thought that Silva managed to inject moments of humor in the story in a most effective way to make the story even more potent, she's definitely an author I'll look forward to reading more of.
Do you need to be emotionally punched in the gut? If so, read this. The grief here is messy and laced with bone deep anger and it just radiates off the page.