Age: Adult
Genre: Fiction(horror)
It’s
summertime in Yellowstone National Park, but it’s far from a pleasant escape for
the park’s visitors and staff. First a wildfire threatens nearby, inching
closer and closer to the visitor’s area and leaving a thick smoke hanging in
the air. Then people start disappearing, but there is no sign of a struggle; it’s
as if they simply vanished. After days of searching, Rangers Joe and Andy
finally stumble upon a watch in the underbrush from a missing staffer.
The
watch was almost stuck to the plant with some sappy, black liquid. Joe held it
up to his nose and took a whiff, pulling it away instantly. The smell was foul.
Like mold and bog water rolled into one.
But what
could leave such a substance? Not any animal the rangers are familiar with.
Unfortunately this is only the beginning of their interaction with a mysterious
shadow creature that feasts on human flesh. As more people go missing, those
left must decide how they can possibly find – and destroy – this beast. But how
can you find something that lurks in the shadows?
Though I
rarely read the horror genre, I do enjoy “creature features” like the SyFy
original movies, and Faithful Shadow
unfolded in a similar fashion. It was a little gory for me, especially towards
the end, but regular readers of horror may have less of a problem with that. In
a former job I read a great deal of self-published novels that were so bad I could
barely understand what the author was trying to communicate, much less enjoy
them – but Howard’s writing is truly professional. Not only was the story enjoyable,
but it was free of the usual errors one would expect to find without a
professional editor on hand. The author obviously put a lot of time into
crafting not only the plot but the language to create a picture in the mind of
the reader. He used great skill in writing horrifying descriptions of the
monster and his wrath throughout the novel. He also kept me turning pages by
giving so little information about the monster early in the story. I kept
wondering what we were dealing with, and that kept me reading. Faithful Shadow should appeal to anyone
who enjoys dark tales of evil creatures unknown to man.
Bibliographical
Information:
Howard,
Kevin. Faithful Shadow. Outskirts
Press, 2012.
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