THEY ARE EATING MY BRAIN

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THEY ARE EATING MY BRAIN

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Hellish Beast by Brian Cormody is an interesting piece of fiction that deals with a lot of issues that are either sarcastic with the PC culture or it is a testament on the world at large or possibly a bit of both.
Written in the first person, the story details Trent as he falls into a sub world within our modern world where an underbelly is running in tandem to corrupt what we know. Flashing back in time, when his best friend, or buddy, finds himself in dire straits due to large want to be candle maker in a historical village burning Mike’s hand in a vat of melted wax. Trent chronicles their friendship compounded with the guilt that he was not able to help his friend.
The story then jumps to the modern day and a death of a cat in a library and how the investigation pulls them down a path into the strange world that operates within our own. This is where the story makes a statement on leftist politics and media culture using film and television references. This is where the novel takes either an interesting turn or creates a narrative that some readers may feel slightly out of touch depending on their cultural points. I personally was able to get everything that the narrator throws out and appreciated the depth the author has done his homework.
The characters are richly written and keeps them in a three dimensional aspect that works within the confines of the novel. Carmody refrains from a cartoonish arch types to ensure that they all are true to their nature and do not act to pull the story out of the twisted plots that occur within the pages. Lilith is one character in point which could have had total injustices infringed on her but being a very capable author, Carmody ensures that she is more than the sum of her parts. The villains of the piece are interesting and keeps the reader engaged through all their impractical personality traits.
The plot is very twisted and there are times that it feels slightly overwritten and the reader may wish that the author would carry on with the story instead of some of the side tracking that occurs. Saying this, other readers will relish this and enjoy these sections immensely. At times, I personally felt that some of the gender politics, PC culture and moral compass of the main protagonist was a little hard to have empathy for. I was not sure if this was the authors view points coming across as he was making a statement in a realistic sense or using this as a sarcastic way of addressing the real world we live in.
The mystery of the piece drives the reader forward and Carmody spends a good deal of the plot unravelling the very interesting plot. There are whole passages where I felt like skipping but kept with it and overall enjoyed what the narrator was trying to convey. One point is when he decides to be open with Lilith, there is a large passage of tidying up everything we just experienced and having it all drawn out. This probably would have been better without a synopsis of what we have already read as it did feel that the pudding was slightly over egged in this sense.
Overall, I really enjoyed the novel and think the right audience will eat this up whilst some people will be left out in the cold. There are some editing problems that probably could have been tidied up more but Carmody just have a talent of keeping the reader thoroughly engaged within the world that he has created. There are some conversations with Mike and Trent that seems a little messy as earlier in the novel, it was hard to keep straight who was conversing with who but the rest of the novel doesn’t seem to have this problem. A horrific mystery settling into the modern world with film and television references thrown in will be a true winner with the right audience. I would rate this 3.5 stars but more to the four star mark.