Review ♦ Slights by Kaaron Warren

About the Book

Stephanie Is A Killer.

After an accident in which her mother dies, she has a near-death experience, and finds herself in a room full of people – everyone she’s ever pissed off. They clutch at her, scratch and tear at her. But she finds herself drawn back to this place, again and again, determined to unlock its secrets. Which means she has to die, again and again.

And she starts to wonder whether other people see the same room … when they die.


Book Title: Slights Genre: Literary Horror
Author: Kaaron Warren Type: Trade Paperback 512 pages
Publisher: Angry Robot Books Publication Date: 2009

My Thoughts   
First things first, the copy of Slights that I read did not have that totally creepy cover you see above, mine was a simple black and red, with the title, author and these two statements:

On the front: “The Buddhists have many different types of heaven. I wanted to explore what it was like to have many different types of Hell.” On the back: “A Wasp Factory for the misery memoir generation.”

Sounds fascinating, but it doesn’t come close to revealing just what you may find inside. Upon finishing the book and seeing the final cover I was actually quite glad to not have seen it beforehand. The main reason is because of how the book progresses in the creepy factor. It builds as you read, until you realize the horror was there all along.

Slights is narrated by Stephanie, with the first chapter titled ‘at eighteen’ and from there each chapter is told from a certain age up to her late-thirties. This format worked wonderfully, not only does the reader get to follow her life as she ages, but also gets to see how her memories and past change as she matures and thinks back on things.

The entire novel is focused on Stephanie, and her family history, including parts she wasn’t present for but are of much importance to her own life. Her father dying at a young age, and her mother dying from an accident which she may have caused could have been the key events that lead Stephanie to develop an unappealing fascination for death. Or maybe it’s just in her blood. Either way she is determined to find out what happens when you die.

Attempting suicide has helped Stephanie, in the past, to cross into the place where life and death merge, and she has come to believe that what waits for you is all those people you slight in your life. It can be someone who holds a grudge for a slight you purposely intended or even a stranger who thinks you’ve done them wrong. All that matters is that these people remember you as having taking advantage, or harmed them in some way.

What was especially fascinating about this premise is that Stephanie also believes that people holding grudges end up in the Hells of the people they feel slighted by. So it only stands to reason that after death there are a million tiny Hells waiting for you. Another aspect that was completely baffling is that Stephanie has to be one of the most unattractive characters ever. Not in personal appearance, but in behavior, attitude, and the way she carries herself. And regardless of her what she believes may happen to people who insult others, she seems to go out of her way to be disrespectful and ignorant. However, that didn’t stop me from feeling for this character – not sympathy exactly, and not really pity. I think it was more of a desire that she find what she was looking for, even if it meant her own destruction, it would have been a relief to see her find even a scrap of peace. 

This is by far one of the most difficult books to review, because I enjoyed it so much, and there were so many layers to the story. Not only a character piece, it’s also a family history, with a mystery to bring the two together. Slights is classified as a horror novel, but don’t go in expecting blood, guts, and monsters. The horror of this book is the human kind, that silently creeping sickness of the psyche that can be hiding inside of any of us.

 

About The Author

Slights is Kaaron’s first novel, and the first of three jaw-dropping books to be published by Angry Robot. Her award-winning short fiction has appeared in Year’s Best Horror & Fantasy, Poe and Haunted Legends anthologies, Fantasy magazine, Paper Cities, and many other venues in the US, Europe and Australia. Her short story “A Positive” has been made into a short film called Patience, and her first ever published short story “White Bed” was dramatized for the stage in Australia.

She is currently working on a novella about the goddess Ishtar and a novel about the washerwoman in history. Kaaron Warren is an Australian, currently based in Fiji.

 

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© 2008-2010 Joanne Mosher of The Book Zombie. All rights reserved.

13 comments:

Shooting Stars Mag said...

Great review. I saw this somewhere and I became instantly intrigued. I'd love to check it out at some point, as well as some other books from Angry Robot. they have really good titles it seems.

--Lauren

christina said...

This book looks crazy good. I admit, I initially scanned, until I saw the reference to the Buddhist heaven .... many hells. I immediately went back and re-read the details. *gasp* Must order from library!

Anna said...

Ooh..this one sounds good. I like creepiness.

--Anna
Diary of an Eccentric

Anonymous said...

Yikes! So the moral of the story is 'be nice to everybody'?!

bermudaonion said...

Sounds totally creepy. I sure hope things aren't like that when I die!

Anonymous said...

Thanks for this insightful review. Do you mind if I link to it on my website?

Kaaron Warren

Anonymous said...

Ack!! No thanks, I can't do psychological horror. Who am I kidding...I don't even do scary movies.

Anonymous said...

This sounds like an amazing read! It's exactly the kind of horror I love, centered more around the psychology than the "yuck" factor. The idea seems original, too!

Lenore Appelhans said...

I'm totally fascinated by afterlife books, but I wonder if this might be too scary for me? The cover certainly freaks me out!! I love your review though - I really enjoy novels that pull off a lot of layers.

Darlene said...

You find some of the best books Joanne! This sounds so awesome and so creepy! I definitely need to find myself a copy of this. Books that are the creepy mind horror always intrigue me. Thanks for the fantastic review.

The Bookworm said...

sounds great, I need to add this to my TBR. I love it when a book gradually gets creepier and creepier.
http://thebookworm07.blogspot.com/

Amy said...

This definitely looks like one I want to read!!!! Thanks for such a great review.

Zibilee said...

This book sounds uncomfortably amazing. I really need to get a copy of this one, for the uniqueness of the story alone. Great review!