For the last year, Holly and Brian have been out of sync. Neither can forget what happened that one winter evening; neither can forgive what’s happened since. Tonight, Holly and Brian race toward Pinebuck, New York, trying to outrun a blizzard on their way to the ski village getaway they hope will save their relationship. But soon they lose control of the car—and then of themselves.
Now Sheriff Kendra Book is getting calls about a couple in trouble—along with reports of a brutal and mysterious creature rampaging through town, leaving a trail of crushed cars, wrecked buildings, and mangled bodies in the snow.
To Kendra, who lost another couple to the snow just seven weeks ago, the danger feels personal. But not as personal as it feels to Holly and Brian, who are starting to see the past, the present, and themselves in a monstrous new light . . .
Holly and Brian are a couple on the rocks. Things have never been the same between them ever since "The Bad Date" occurred. It takes quite a while until we are allowed to know what happened on that particular date that changed their happy relationship into a shell of what it used to be. All we know is that there are some serious cracks in their bond, and they are headed on a getaway to a small sky village in hopes of mending their relationship, or maybe just calling it quits altogether.
Unfortunately, the weather has other plans for them. After losing control of the car in a blizzard they also lose each other. They are separated in the storm but they are not alone. There is something monstrous with them.
I loved the first part of this book. After a while, it got repetitive with so much running, hiding, escaping, and leaving cell phone messages for each other over and over. Still, I mostly enjoyed this bitterly cold tale.
The monster itself was somewhat unexpected. It was an interesting take, although never fully explained, but I guess horror doesn't need to make perfect sense and would be boring if it did. The back-and-forth bickering between the couple, and the fear of speaking what they truly meant felt realistic and will probably be uncomfortably familiar to anyone who ever spent time in a crumbling relationship.
4 out of 5 stars.
My thanks to Hell's Hundred.
No comments:
Post a Comment