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Book Review of A Good and Happy Child

A Good and Happy Child
shiner716 avatar reviewed on + 34 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 2


from armchairinterviews.com

Justin Evans' debut novel, A Good and Happy Child, is an intelligent and highly sophisticated psychological thriller.

George Davies has a problem--he cannot bring himself to touch or interact with his newborn son. To salvage his relationship with his confused and frightened wife, George goes to therapy. During these therapy sessions, George confesses to his doctor he has been in therapy before; however, when asked why he had been in treatment, George seems unable--or unwilling--to answer. Giving George a notebook, the doctor suggests he write as much as he can remember about his past problems.

What emerges in George's notebooks is a nightmarish cocktail of childhood fear, loneliness, and evil. In them, George writes that his father died when he was eleven, and that three months later, George became possessed with a demon, the same demon that had caused his father's death.

As the adult George remembers and writes about the terror and uncertainty his eleven-year-old self faced, his grip on the present begins to slip, threatening to push him back into a past he has, until now, successfully smothered.

The novel's narrative switches between the older George, who speaks directly to his therapist in the book, and George's notebooks, in which he records the events and experiences of the younger George struggling to come to terms with his belief that he has been possessed by evil.

A Good and Happy Child is a gem of a novel: its writing is quiet and assured, maintaining throughout a deceptive calmness that paradoxically magnifies the horrific memories George calmly records in his notebooks. Without relying on the physical or sexual violence that many thrillers use to ratchet up suspense, A Good and Happy Child manages to terrify using only the terrain of the mind--sometimes the most frightening place of all.

Armchair Interviews says: This is an intelligent psychological thriller that crescendos to a startling conclusion, and will leave you sleeping with the lights on.