Every so often I come across a book that is so mind blowing I need a long while to collect my thoughts for a review – Switchboard by Andrew Post is one of those books. “Awesome” sums it up, but that would hardly tell you why you should read this novel. The storyline, characters, and writing style were all so captivating, it was one of those rare gems you come across where you want to reread it as soon as you’re finished.
There’s an undercover narcotics detective, body modification surgeries, drug induced visions, ghosts inhabiting papier-mâché people, and burner phones connected to another dimension. It’s a wild ride to say the least!
In Erie, Pennsylvania, narcotics detective Dwayne Spare is certain the dilapidated Dunsany Arms apartment building is at the centre of Gerald Metzger’s drug operation. Previous raids haven’t produced the evidence, so Dwayne goes undercover as a new tenant. But his cover doesn’t last long, and he’s injected with Metzger’s special drug. When Dwayne awakens there’s a voicemail on his phone from himself, from somewhere beyond.
I don’t want to say more about the plot for fear of spoiling it, but I will say it’s gripping and nearly impossible to put down.
Besides the detective, the novel also goes deep into the lives of other apartment tenants, all connected to Metzger’s business. Connie, a specialist in body modification, cuts pockets into people’s skin for drug smuggling and is responsible for removing dead tissue from junkies. Jack, a drug runner, turns to suicide as an ultimate escape, but soon finds Dunsany Arms won’t let go of his soul. Even the apartment building itself is like a character. A place as broken down as its residents, and a place where time figuratively and literally has no bearing.
And speaking of time, author Andrew Post brilliantly handled playing around with the concept of time throughout the book. Each character is battling an aspect of their past, and to heighten the desperation of the characters the story unfolds in a nonlinear way, causing old and new torments to collide in unexpected ways. A disrupted narrative can be dicey in novels, but Post uses the technique to add another layer to the story and it pays off in a big way. I never felt confused by the narrative because of Post’s attention to detail which beautifully tied everything together.
While I was reading Switchboard, I was awestruck by the strong images of even the smallest details, and it wasn’t until I was finished that I realised how each element circled back to impactful moments in each character’s life. Even the choice of Metzger’s drug being Krokodil was used to foreshadow the sufferings of the Dunsany Arms tenants as they unravelled and fell apart mentally as well as physically. If you’ve never heard of Krokodil and would like some nightmare fuel, Google images of its side effects. Just be warned, it’s also known as the zombie drug due to the skin necrosis it causes. Andrew Post does an excellent job of describing all the gory details of the rotting drug users, and one of my favourite lines was “Screams from a jawless mouth sound very different.”
This novel is my top read of the year so far, that’s how much I loved it. Switchboard is a thrilling tragedy sure to haunt you long after you’ve closed the covers.
*This review first appeared on Kendall Reviews*