Welcome to the Dark House by Laurie Faria Stolarz
Horror filmmaker Justin Blake has invited people from all over the country to enter a contest to get an inside look at his latest project – all they have to do is write about their worst nightmare. Seven lucky teenagers, each with their own POV chapters, were selected based on their entries, and they’ve been flown to a creepy hotel staffed by people who are dead ringers for killers from Blake’s many movies. Immediately upon their arrival, strange things start to happen: one of the girls flees the hotel; the others find writing on her closet wall in what appears to be blood warning them to get away. But it’s all part of the fun, right? These horror-lovers (with the notable exception of Ivy, who entered the contest in hopes it would help her face down her real life horror) want to be scared. Then they’re all taken to a carnival and told that in order to meet Blake, they must survive the rides that are their nightmares come to life – and things take a turn for the deadly.
This is a great pick for fans of campy horror films. The book itself is pretty much a version of one of those films anyway, right down to a perspective told mostly in screenplay format. It doesn’t try to do anything new, but rather embraces the tropes that make those films fun for viewers: a creepy carnival, a remote location, no cell phone signals, mostly one-note participants being picked off one by one. Readers will be able to see how it will end, but the ride is fun nonetheless.
Scintillate by Tracy Clark
After an illness where Cora was hospitalized for a high fever, she’s able to see auras around people. They vary from person to person, depending on their personality and their mood, but Cora’s own is always pure silver. She tries to talk to her dad about it (her mother is long out of the picture), but he won’t answer any of her questions. The proprietor of a local bookshop tells her that auras are real, that Cora has a special ability to see them, and that pure silver auras are very rare – right before she’s threatened into silence and refuses to see Cora again. When Cora begins to notice a man following her around, a man with a pure white aura who can somehow suck out the auras of others around him, killing them, she knows she must find out what’s going on. She learns it’s tied somehow to her mother’s disappearance in Ireland, so she travels there hoping to puzzle it out, encountering danger, romance, and long-lost secrets.
I started this one thinking I may not finish it, but it surprised me with how compelling it was. The way Clark wrote about auras was interesting; it’s a topic that I haven’t read much about in fiction. But what really makes this stand out from the sea of other paranormal light fantasies is the way Clark handles the romance. I wasn’t at all surprised to encounter what’s often called “insta-love” between Cora and her school’s exchange student hottie. But there’s a plot and a character reason for it, which is fully revealed near the end of the story and makes such head-over-heels instant attraction an inevitability. Clark knows what she’s doing with her story – she recognizes the cliches inherent in her genre and works with them in a clever way. The writing is solid, with a great voice in Cora and an exciting climax, and the mythology is interesting, too, making this a good pick for paranormal romance fans.
Nearly Gone by Elle Cosimano
There’s a serial killer on the loose at Nearly Boswell’s high school, and it seems that he (or she) is doing everything he can to make it look like Nearly is the culprit. It started with an innocent-seeming personal ad in the Classifieds section of the newspaper, a section Nearly combs through every day hoping to read a message from her father who abandoned her and her mother when she was a little girl. The first victim is merely humiliated; when the second victim dies, Nearly knows the second personal ad referring cryptically to the location where the body was found wasn’t merely strange; it was targeting her specifically. She goes to the police, but they either don’t believe her or think she’s in on it. She feels like she has no choice but to stop the killing on her own – with the help of the school’s bad boy, a former juvenile delinquent who’s now agreed to keep tabs on Nearly for the police in case she’s the killer.
This is a fantastic, smart mystery/thriller that’s plotted to perfection. The riddles in the Classifieds are really fun to puzzle out, and Cosimano sprinkles a lot of red herrings and potential motives throughout the book. There are subplots galore; any one of them could point to the serial killer. The name “Nearly” is a little too cute for my liking (oh, the puns Cosimano uses!), and Nearly’s ability to sense others’ emotions by touching them seems completely extraneous. Unlike a book like Kim Harrington’s Clarity, where the protagonist’s ability is integral to solving the crime, Nearly’s ability doesn’t do much for her (or against her). There’s one scene where she’s at a rave and is overwhelmed by the emotions present within the drug- and adrenaline-fueled participants, but that’s as much as her ability ever bears on the plot. Aside from these things, though, this is one of the best teen mysteries I’ve read. I especially liked that the riddles focused on math and science, areas where Nearly excels. It’s a fun workout for the reader’s brain and nice to see a girl protagonist who loves those subjects.
All books borrowed from my local library.
Lenore Appelhans says
I noted, too, in my review of Nearly Gone that the paranormal aspect didn't have much bearing on the plot, but it did have such an affect on her emotional arc. I enjoyed it for that!