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Black Mad Wheel by Josh Malerman
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josh malerman has become the go-to dude for sensory horror.

if they ever let monkeys* become book reviewers (why so UNFAIR, world?), this is how it would go:

Bird Box:
 photo 558df446-5879-4f75-acf8-d1a73f9dbf57_zpso8gnwpfx.jpg

Black Mad Wheel:
 photo f857bd54-ce4b-4da4-92f1-5de87f29e8ea_zpsbk4wdoi3.jpg

his (awesome) debut novel, Bird Box, featured an ambiguous “something” that swept the globe; a presence that drove anyone who looked at it mad: homicidal, suicidal, utterly destroyed. it was wonderfully intense, as characters were threatened by a force they could neither name nor even visualize, spending their lives in a protective elective blindness; not-looking at what might or might not be right there on their periphery, lurking behind them, creeping up the stairs… all of which made for a delicious tension for the reader; the horror of the unseen and unknowable foe.

this one is about a mysterious sound emanating from a desert in africa, one so intense that it neutralizes weapons and causes immediate visceral responses in the human body: vomiting, immobility, pain, and, when too close to the source of the sound, delivers an impact that’ll break every bone in the body. however, instead of characters avoiding a mysterious destructive force, here we have people who are sent specifically to locate the sound.

philip tonka is a man who experienced all of the above trauma, and somehow lived through it. he has been in a coma for six months, and has just awakened in a secret military hospital in iowa, recovering from his injuries at a remarkable rate, and being grilled by officers and doctors about his experiences, memories of which are fragmented and confusing.

i should mention, since the synopsis does not, that this is a historical novel, taking place in 1957. otherwise, you may have the same bewildering moment of dislocation i had when philip mentions something that happened when he returned from world war II, leaving me wondering how old this damn character was, and how an elderly man could have survived the breaking of every bone in his body. but no - he is only thirty-one, although it's still pretty remarkable to survive these massive sound-inflicted injuries.

philip did indeed serve in WWII, but not in active combat - he was in the military band, where he made the friends with whom he would go on to form the successful detroit-based rock band the danes. and now, twelve years after their service, the four members of the danes are approached by military intelligence telling them to soldier up and head into the desert to investigate this sound, a mission that has already been attempted twice, unsuccessfully, with the reasoning that those with a musical background will be better-equipped to handle the specific challenges of acoustics and echoes that an auditory threat presents.

they patriotically accept, the offer made more tempting by the promise of $100,000 each.

from that point on, the narrative is a jumble of past and present, real and surreal, as two stories unfold: the band and their military escorts head into the desert and are unprepared for what they find, and the aftermath of philip’s broken mind and body trying to remember what went down from his hospital bed, while the sympathetic nurse ellen is the only friendly face in a barrage of interrogations and injections by sadistic doctors and military personnel.

there are a lot of questions: the military wants to know what happened, how to get to the sound, if it can be weaponized, and philip wants to know what happened to himself and what became of the other danes. the reader, of course, wants to know all of this and more. and while many answers will be given - some of which answers just lead to further questions, some of the details remain unclear.

i’m still unsure how i feel about this book. in Bird Box, there was much left ambiguous at the end, and there the lingering mystery-shiver was wholly satisfying. with this one, some of the answers that are given take too much of the mystery away while others led to too many unanswered follow-up questions of “but, why?” & etc.

the writing definitely kept me interested and turning those pages, especially once everything started chugging and i began to get the same kind of vibe i got from Dark Matter, but i never really got that AHA! moment that makes a twisty-structured book like this *work.*

additional minor quibbles: despite this book being almost entirely from philip’s perspective, he isn’t particularly well-defined. he's the dude who does the stuff and who has the stuff happen to him more than a character. also, the romance aspect is jammed in without a whole lot of narrative foreplay, so it doesn't feel like a natural progression of events.

but all that aside - the journey itself is a creepy good time, even if the payoff is a bit muddled. it’s thoughtful overall, and it’s an unusual situation, which goes a long way towards my own personal readerly enjoyment, and i’m always willing to concede “it's me, not you” when it comes to any confusion i might have with a book.

so - it's definitely worth a read, for everything that happens between the naively optimistic, "How much trouble can one sound be?" to the chilling warning of "I wouldn't do that if I were you."

shivers.



*with apologies to rigorous taxonomists

 photo Hear-No-Evil-See-No-Evil-Speak-No-Evil_zpsh7m3a6xu.jpg

***********************************************
so, for those of you who were asking - right now it's a solid 3-3.5. i need to do another pass before i cement that rating. not as much creepy fun (for me) as Bird Box, but definitely worth reading.

full review and probably more star-waffling to come...

come to my blog!
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Reading Progress

February 11, 2017 – Shelved
March 19, 2017 – Started Reading
March 23, 2017 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-37 of 37 (37 new)

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[Name Redacted] How does it measure up?


karen i am on page 10, must read further!


message 3: by Chelsea (new)

Chelsea Humphrey Oh man! Wtf?! It slipped by me that he had another one coming out. Can't wait to hear your thoughts on it!


Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ I NEED THIS REVIEW AND THIS BOOK!


karen i am going to try to get to the review today. miles to go and all...


karen i have started it! i need to put pressure on ME!


Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ I need to write reviews this weekend, but march madness has taken over MY LIFE.


karen okay, i finished this one at least. with many distractions along the way.


Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ Lovely review. Bird Box was the best book I read last year, and one of only I think 3 or 4 5 star reviews. I am trying not to let my expectations spin out of control before I read this.


message 11: by Rose (new)

Rose Tezanos Thanks for the review Karen!!


karen thanks! bird box is definitely tighter and scarier, but this one has its own strengths.


message 13: by [deleted user] (new)

please may you freind me i have 0 so far


Patricia.burnstalktalk.com Atatzfzf
AbHz


[Name Redacted] This (as you describe it) sort of reminds me of John Darnielle's work -- an odd, dislocated and periodically-frustrating work that you don't regret reading, but which doesn't wholly satisfy.


karen i still have to read him. greg liked the first one, and i like the looks of the new one.


message 17: by [Name Redacted] (last edited Mar 25, 2017 04:17PM) (new) - rated it 2 stars

[Name Redacted] karen wrote: "i still have to read him. greg liked the first one, and i like the looks of the new one."

Yeah, I really enjoyed Wolf in White Van, especially if you can get your hands (ears?) on the audio version which Darnielle himself read. Looking forward to Universal Harvester... From what I hear, "Universal Harvester" is more in the vein of "Black Mad Wheel" but on a smaller, more intimate scale.


message 18: by Jan (new) - added it

Jan Great review! I gave my eye on this for sure


Ellen Gail Ugh I need this one! I'm trying to keep my expectations in check after how much I triple loved Bird Box, and A House at the Bottom of a Lake was really good too. My expectations have raised themselves.

And thanks for pointing out it's historical fiction, that would definitely have confused me too! ps I've decided the nurse Ellen was named after me and no one will tell me otherwise.


Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ [Name Redacted] wrote: "karen wrote: "i still have to read him. greg liked the first one, and i like the looks of the new one."

Yeah, I really enjoyed Wolf in White Van, especially if you can get your han..."


I've wanted to read his books since they came out. I've listened to the Mountain Goats for several years and I'm a big fan of his work in general.


[Name Redacted] Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ wrote: "[Name Redacted] wrote: "karen wrote: "i still have to read him. greg liked the first one, and i like the looks of the new one."

Yeah, I really enjoyed Wolf in White Van, especially..."


Definitely give "Wolf" a read/listen. It's a book that manages to be haunting AND soothing, horrifying AND charming.


karen i haven't read house/lake yet, but i want to. i think it was kindle-only for a while, but it looks like i can get a real-boy copy now. i'm just lazy - if i can't get it into the store where i work, i never remember to go elsewhere. lay-z.

ellen is definitely named after you. there was a press conference and everything.


Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ [Name Redacted] wrote: "Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ wrote: "[Name Redacted] wrote: "karen wrote: "i still have to read him. greg liked the first one, and i like the looks of the new one."

Yeah, I really enj..."


I own it on ebook so I'm certain I will get to it soon.

karen, have you read Ghastle and Yule by him? That was a short novella I really enjoyed!


karen no! is that a kindle thing, too?


karen it IS!!! grrrrrr


Jess ❈Harbinger of Blood-Soaked Rainbows❈ Yeah actually I think it might be. I always forget you have a nook and not a kindle. Cause it's free for kindle right now.
My review is here:
https://www.goodreads.com/review/show...

It has some night-film-esque things about it I really enjoyed.


karen hhmph.


message 28: by Josh (new)

Josh Malerman Karen! Thank you. I kinda love this review. And I promise... no more sensory horror. That was a weird coincidence of sorts. More on that some other time. Again, thank you.


karen oh, but i LOVE the coincidence - it makes you the king of this niche! and just think where it could go... what is that evil SMELL???? muah hahahaaaaaaa


message 30: by Josh (new)

Josh Malerman now you gotta write it. Smell-horror. Shit that sounds terrible. If you need any research I can send you to some of the basements I lived in in college.


karen ha! nah, no one's gonna read anything i write - i'm just a reader... however, i will counter your offer of research with some of my own, specifically, a chapter entitled what the hell did my cat EAT??

cuz that was stinky.


Heather Drake I totally agree with you on the ambiguous ending of Bird Box vs the ambiguous ending of Black Mad Wheel.


karen i'm about to read (soon, but not immediately) Unbury Carol, so we'll see how that ending stacks up!


Jimmy I thought that this was a fair review. I happened to enjoy the writing, time-period, and music theme so much that I gave it five stars. This was the kind of book I could live in for style alone. But the end was a bit weak.


Jimmy ...but still awesome. Looking forward to reading more of his work.


karen he's not always perfect, but i still love him.


Mikaela This.


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