The Bone Key, by Sarah Monette
A collection of old-school stories of ghosts and other things that go bump in the night, starring a socially anxious, neurasthenic archivist by the name of Kyle Murchison Booth.
The stories are in the tradition of eerie old tales like “The Monkey’s Paw” and “Whistle and I’ll Come For You, My Lad,” in which terrors are not laid out in gory detail, but lurk, mostly unseen, in the corner of your eye. Family curses, incubi, resurrected dead that come back wrong, and all sorts of hauntings beset poor lonely Booth, in addition to the more private terrors inside his head. The stories are atmospheric, eerie, and sad.
Booth’s social isolation is offset a bit by several stories in which people offer him friendship and understanding, though he generally isn’t sure exactly what to do with it. I was unclear on the exact time period of the book, other than “not contemporary.” Booth is gay, which certainly doesn’t help with his social problems, but I’m not sure he’d do much better nowadays in that department. He’s the sort of person who would really benefit from therapy, but would never see a therapist for the exact reasons which make him need it.
This pleasingly eerie book is best read in a soft armchair in front of a crackling fire on a dark and preferably stormy night. Sweet dreams, and don't look out the window.
The Bone Key[image error]
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The stories are in the tradition of eerie old tales like “The Monkey’s Paw” and “Whistle and I’ll Come For You, My Lad,” in which terrors are not laid out in gory detail, but lurk, mostly unseen, in the corner of your eye. Family curses, incubi, resurrected dead that come back wrong, and all sorts of hauntings beset poor lonely Booth, in addition to the more private terrors inside his head. The stories are atmospheric, eerie, and sad.
Booth’s social isolation is offset a bit by several stories in which people offer him friendship and understanding, though he generally isn’t sure exactly what to do with it. I was unclear on the exact time period of the book, other than “not contemporary.” Booth is gay, which certainly doesn’t help with his social problems, but I’m not sure he’d do much better nowadays in that department. He’s the sort of person who would really benefit from therapy, but would never see a therapist for the exact reasons which make him need it.
This pleasingly eerie book is best read in a soft armchair in front of a crackling fire on a dark and preferably stormy night. Sweet dreams, and don't look out the window.
The Bone Key[image error]
[image error] [image error]

Published on December 05, 2018 14:12
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