"Please join me this Sunday (2nd August) at 12 noon on www.bighitsradio.uk for this weekend's edition of SUNDAY SERVICE.
Along with all the usual top music, lively chatter, regular features and listeners requests/dedications, I'll also be taking an in-depth look at the gritty horror novel THE RETURN by David A. Riley.
Only on BIG HITS RADIO UK! " Trevor Kennedy
For anyone who missed the broadcast, this is a transcript of the review, which originally appeared in Phantasmagoria magazine:
"To
paraphrase Shakespeare, there is something rotten in the Northern
English town of Edgebottom, especially within the district of the
appropriately named Grudge End. The ground there is sour, cursed for
centuries perhaps. The powerful Malleson family have owned the now
derelict mill at the epicentre of the area for decades, a family with
some twisted secrets of their own. Over the years, countless horrors
have occurred in Grudge End; brutal ritualistic murders, whole families
massacred with their heads removed, and many others driven to insanity
and suicide by the catalogue of ghastly events there.
Gary Morgan is a man with a rather shady past, to say the least. He grew
up in Grudge End and when he was a teenager his drunken brute of a
father was viciously butchered in what was believed by many locals to be
an occult-related murder. Although having moved away from the area for
quite some time, Gary’s own life has been shrouded with criminal
connections and several failed marriages. He decides to return to his
home town for one last time before the streets and mills where he spent
his youth are pulled down for good. And to escape the clutches of some
quite nasty London-based gangsters as well.
On his return, Gary bumps into an old school friend of his, Kevin Cross,
whose increasingly manic paranoia surrounding ‘something’ in town is
just the tip of the very dark iceberg of what is to follow. When Kevin
has his arm savagely hacked off by a mysterious assailant, a series of
events begin to unravel, all connected to Gary, the vile Malleson
family, and the deep, ancient secrets of Edgebottom. As the bodies begin
to mount up and the baffled police close in, something very Old is
awakening from a long slumber…
Bloody hell, it really is grim up north! And down south in London too,
it appears. Author David A. Riley presents us with an extremely violent,
bleak, fantastically weaved tale that could perhaps best be described
as H.P. Lovecraft meets the Kray twins via the kitchen sink British
realism films of the late 1950s/early ‘60s. It is gloriously dark in
Edgebottom, literally and figuratively, from the highly sinister occult
goings on, to the East End gangsters out for their pound of flesh. Even
the weather here is persistently miserable, with its torrential rain,
bitter coldness and overcast skies.
Riley’s story is expertly created throughout, with the narrative
point-of-view seamlessly switching between the main protagonist, the
investigating police detectives, the gangsters, and so on. The building
tension and mystery surrounding the town is both gripping and morbidly
fascinating. When the real horror kicks in around the second half of the
book, the appearance of the satyr-esque being is indeed a sight to
behold. A truly terrifying, seemingly unstoppable creation of pure
unadulterated evil.
There are the aforementioned homages to Lovecraft, more so towards the
end, however these slide in perfectly to the rest of Riley’s tale, one
that would still stand strong on its own even without the Lovecraftian
influences.
A definite recommendation for fans of grim horror and HPL alike."
Many thanks, Trevor, for that great review!
Many thanks, Trevor, for that great review!
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