EYES TO SEE by Joseph Nassise
TOR Books, 2011
318 pages
This is the first in a series of novels about a new occult
hero, Jeremiah Hunt. Though set in the modern world, it is a world where
ghosts, witches, demons and shapeshifters proliferate, unseen by the bulk of
humanity. It could be our world, of course, because until Hunt takes part in a
ceremony to enable him to “see that which is unseen” he is as unaware as the
rest of us of its existence. This ceremony, part of his desperate bid to find
his abducted daughter, has far reaching results. While it enables him to see
the spirit world, in particular ghosts, at the same time his normal ability to
see is destroyed. Burned out by visions of the full scope of reality, his eyes
are blind in normal light and can only see in pitch darkness or via the eyes of
ghosts.
Still searching for his daughter, Hunt is occasionally
consulted by a local Boston police
detective for his “psychic” abilities. The cases he becomes involved with eventually
centre on a series of bizarre brutal murders which, piece by piece, he comes to
realise have a bearing on the unknown fate of his daughter. In his search he
finds help from two unlikely sources, a young, talented witch, a worshipper of
Gaia, and a huge Russian bar-owner with frightening abilities of his own. What
they are up against, though, makes even their combined abilities seem puny by
comparison. It’s an ancient evil, stretching back into America’s
distant colonial past, which is manipulating Hunt without him realising how he
is being used and bringing him closer to an horrific fate.
Fast paced, with plenty of twists and turns in its
storyline, this is an accomplished novel of supernatural evil, with tenuous
links to the author’s other series of occult novels involving modern Knights
Templars. Jeremiah Hunt is a credible hero, deeply flawed but determined. It is
a dark urban fantasy of the darkest, most horrific kind.
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