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Book Reviews of The Shadows

The Shadows
The Shadows
Author: Alex North
ISBN-13: 9781250318039
ISBN-10: 1250318033
Publication Date: 7/7/2020
Pages: 368
Rating:
  • Currently 3.8/5 Stars.
 19

3.8 stars, based on 19 ratings
Publisher: Celadon Books
Book Type: Hardcover
Reviews: Amazon | Write a Review

5 Book Reviews submitted by our Members...sorted by voted most helpful

reviewed The Shadows on + 2 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2
Alternate timelines, alternate narratives, lucid dreams and twists and turns that leave you completely floored while sending you on a search of your memory or the previous pages to see where it all fits together, or to find where you lost sight of what was happening. Such an awesome story of myth, horror and a town's long unsolved (but not forgotten) crime. The cover is great and immediately caught my attention. Alex North nailed it with The Shadows, I regret not reading The Whisper Man yet and will be reading that as soon as possible. An author well worth your attention! The story evolves slowly, wraps up quite fast and intense with a nice, swift transition between the two. The Shadows is definitely a new favorite that I will be reading again
dragoneyes avatar reviewed The Shadows on + 847 more book reviews
A interesting story that revolves around a town's urban legend. That legend is about a ghost named Red Hands that lives out in the creepy woods called The Shadows. With that legend comes some who believe in it and will do anything to make contact, even if it means murder. It is a new eerie mystery that brings back Detective Amanda Beck from The Whisper Man. Good story that holds your attention and great characters that you like to read about. I enjoyed it but not as much as The Whisper Man. Still, Alex North is an author I'll be following.
reviewed The Shadows on + 3160 more book reviews
Another POV

I really liked The Whisper Man but this one is lacking in lots of ways

It is very very slow and by the halfway mark I had to ask questions: what is this actually about? where is this going?

So, it's about a long ago murder but yet it is so slow and drawn out, it's not a thriller, it's not creepy, it's not a ghost story, it's just a mystery from years ago of a murder that happened that no one realized it happened until the present day when Paul went back to see his mother who is dying

So although I see a couple of 4/5 ratings I just can't give it more than 1, it's just too slow and messy and for a long time just makes no sense, I finally had to skip and skim just over the half point to finally find out what it's actually about and I don't think it is very good at all and I think it could've been written better
susieqmillsacoustics avatar reviewed The Shadows on + 1062 more book reviews
This is another good, scary read from North. Surprising twists and turns that I didn't see coming. Wow! Red hands and red herrings.
terez93 avatar reviewed The Shadows on + 345 more book reviews
"There are moments in life like that, I think - moments you understand on some level are pivotal. Where everything will change, and you'll regret it forever if you don't do something you know you should."

This book was a curious mix of various mystery/horror elements, with a curious twist at the end. It's also replete with standard horror fare, including a strange, dilapidated hometown, which the protagonist, Paul Adams, has left decades ago; deranged townspeople, most seemingly with secrets; clueless local police, who are helpless to do anything about the murders, and long-buried secrets.

Paul reluctantly comes back to town to farewell his dying mother, but with some reservations: Paul left as a teenager, and never looked back, not least because one of his friends was slaughtered by two of his other childhood friends, one of them clearly a sociopath obsessed with dreams. The memory of this event has haunted Paul his entire life, to the degree that he has seemingly abandoned his former friends, classmates, and even his own family along with his sinister hometown, where a dark cloud seems to perpetually hover over the people who live there, their number growing fewer and fewer with each passing year.

After a string of bizarre occurrences, one of Paul's childhood friends was apprehended for a murder he couldn't remember committing; the other, Charlie Crabtree, the ringleader of a type of dream cult, which Paul wisely leaves, seemingly disappeared without a trace, into the woods, the Shadows ... or did he? Ritualistic murders and strange signs, specifically bloody hand prints, have been appearing again, and may be connected to a series of unexplained murders, which could be the work of a copycat, or Charlie himself... or something even more sinister.

Overall, this was an engaging read, although it did lag in places. There were some genuine moments of suspense, and the twist at the end was refreshing, but they were fairly few and far between. The whole time I was reading it, at least until the end, I kept thinking that it was inspired at least in part by the Nightmare on Elm Street saga, another series which focuses on an obsession with lucid dreams, and summoning a demon from the world of sleep to take revenge in the land of the living, the story Charlie concocts to try to cover his dark deeds.

The book is also haphazardly organized, with flashbacks, told from varying perspectives, from the young and aged Paul, to a third-party narrator, to the perspective of an out-of-town police officer who seems rather out of place in this account. It's a bit hard to follow in some places because it jumps back and forth so much, a literary device I'm not terribly fond of. It was a capable quick read, worth the time if you're a fan of this genre.