Arriving in West Baden with the bottle and a camera, Shaw begins to have vivid
and disturbing visions. And the more he finds out about the town and the man,
the more he suspects that something besides the West Baden Springs Hotel has
just been restored
Eric Shaw, Josiah Bradford, Anne McKinney and Danny Hastings – along with
all of the others in this startling novel –are such rounded, multi-dimensional
characters, it's almost as though the reader can reach into the page and touch,
hold or punch them. The fact that the setting, as explained in the author’s
notes, is genuine, helps give the story as a whole a depth and sense of credibility
that might otherwise be lost and so helps the Indiana towns of West Baden and
French Lick become extremely powerful characters in their own right and so add
a further dimension and colour to proceedings.
Above all, however, it is the plot itself that makes this novel as mesmerising
as it is. The manner in which the story moves between past and present so seamlessly
and at such a tremendous pace is as though a film is being painted in prose
before the reader’s eyes and so automatically lifts them from their seats
and places them at the very hub of the action from word one, page one and so
carries them along until the very end.
A short story that evolved into a five-hundred page novel, it is credit to Koryta’s
skills that never once does his story become confused or clichéd and
that each turning point is so well defined and yet so well disguised, we are
constantly surprised and, therefore, begging for more.
With five mainstream crime novels to his name in the USA, Koryta has ventured
onto pastures new, with what is, ostensibly a horror/fantasy novel, with such
aplomb it can only be hoped that his other work be made available sooner rather
than later.
Chilling, compelling and captivating ... just three “C” words that
don’t even begin to say just how good Michael Koryta’s So
Cold the River actually is. Many may have tried and all have failed
to “Out-King” Stephen King, but Koryta – with his consummate
story-telling powers – can place this well and truly in the same league
as anything the so-called Master of Horror has ever accomplished, without ever
cloning the great man’s style in any way.
More Information: http://www.michaelkoryta.com