I did not have a good experience here. And there are some spoilers ahead, which I couldn't avoid, so please be aware of that. My first issue was that this was advertised as a 100-page book, but ended up stopping short at 84, leaving room for an excerpt from another book by the author, which was not mentioned anywhere in the book's summary on Goodreads. So that was quite frustrating. And with that type of limited space, you need to make your plot points quick and effectively. However, we were still being introduced to characters almost to the halfway mark. And there were way too many characters involved, which took away attention from the better aspects of the story. The 'cultists' who summon the beast should have been present during the initial ritual, but then been killed, and not dragging out into the remainder of the book. They served no other purpose than to be killed. And for all the killing by Behemoth, there was almost no gore and violence detailed. It more or less just swallowed people. For almost all creature features, gore is a must, and it was almost totally overlooked here. I also went back and tried to find any reasoning for the ritual, but couldn't find anything. Golding should have been the primary focus here. He was a great character and his entire experience with Hunter's illness was the heart of the story. When the dog eventually passes away, I was left wanting a ton more than what was written. There was this huge build up, but then there wasn't much emotion from Golding after that. Most notably his interaction with Jeger and Haugland. You would think a lonely man who just lost his only companion, in Hunter, would have some memories or emotional triggers seeing another person with their dog, immediately after having his own pet euthanized. But their interaction was very awkward and displayed little, if any emotion. And also around this same interaction, these two men spot Behemoth, but then separate from each other, which I was very confused by. Golding went to bury Hunter, which would have made much more sense as one of the final scenes of the story. Now on the ending, I was very underwhelmed with Golding and Behemoth's battle. Much like other aspects of the story, there was a ton of anticipation for biblical intervention and some big alternate ritual to send the beast back to hell, but it was all way too quick and done with very simple, primitive means. And what happens after their battle, which I won't spoil, seemed very random, and did not align with any other part of the story. Felt like just a very random way to be done with the story, without having to give the reader any insight to the internal logic. I don't like focusing on so many negatives, but I went into this book with high hopes, reading Eddie Generous for the first time, and was left feeling very unsatisfied. I think if this story kept itself simple, especially with less than one hundred pages, it would have made a world of difference. The beast is brought forth, kills its summoners in ugly and hideous ways, it rampages through the wilderness, Golding grieves the loss of Hunter and uses that as fuel to battle this beast destroying his peaceful territory, he finds his peace once everything concludes, etc. The author made the mistake of trying to fit way too much into such a little space, and the entire story suffered. And as I said earlier, there was some really good stuff in here, but none of it was developed properly, and there were more disappointments than satisfactory payoffs.