'Monsters' tells the tale of a kidnapped child from a small, run down and forgotten town and the subsequent efforts of the private investigator hired to find her by a desperate mother. It is a story where no-one is quite what they seem, and where everyone has something to hide. Except the PI himself, who monstrously deformed, matches none of the current stereotypes of the detective, and who immediately becomes the prime suspect in the case he has been hired to crack. He is deformed and hideous, ergo he is the fiend.
Now the PI, 'Doyle', has to solve this case to save his own, hideous skin. This, of course, is a premise that many crime fiction and thriller readers will be used to, however 'Monsters' adds a few more twists to it than that. Think John Merrick, the Elephant Man, hard-boiled and Little Red Riding Hood and you will have something and nothing of what this delightfully dark thriller has in store for the reader.
There are Monsters everywhere, from the fiend that kidnaps a young child to the town itself, which now lies like a dead creature, haunting the townsfolk. The characters, like the setting, are well explored and most, in their way, have traits that are all too human, all too real and all too monstrous themselves - and none of them just 'make up the numbers'. It is like the fallen town has infected its citizens with a dangerous plague of lethargy and selfishness, malcontent and hatred; all of which is sucked to the surface when a mother's daughter disappears one Hallowe'en night.
And there is murder.
'Monsters' continues to deliver the thematic kicks and narrative punches with thorough, yet dexterous description throughout, exploring the Fankensteinain monster that a broken society can create. It shows the pain wreaked when friendships turn sour and families split from jealousy and selfishness. And throughout, 'Monsters' does all this with a cast of characters that the reader can care about, get to know and love - or hate - with every turn of the page.
'Monsters' is a great read. Fast and honest, it is a welcome addition to a genre that is well trod. Written by a new author (as I understand him to be), he has scripted a new, almost cinematic tale to add to this great genre.
This novel should be read if for no other reason than for the Private Investigator imagined like none before. 'Doyle' is a character that could be easliy hated, easily loathed but ultimately he is all that and more; 'Doyle' takes much more than mere social labelling to know. And the author encourages the reader to try to understand the man, the Monster, and his world with pace and aplomb. The story of this man makes this book particularly hard to set down.
I thoroughly enjoyed 'Monsters' and would recommend it to anyone.