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Claire Fuller is the author of Hunger and Thirst, a literary horror out today from Tin House / Zando.
Iām always searching for horror novels where the writer seems to have cared as much about interesting, beautiful prose as scaring me. Here are three:
Idle Grounds by Krystelle Bamford: Told mostly in the first person plural, the voice of this novel is skittish, with digressions and asides. Some young cousins gather for a birthday party in upstate New York, where they see something from a bathroom window moving over and over from the treeline to a shed. Abi, only three, charges outside, and the others follow. There is creepiness, surprise, and craziness, all of it brilliantly written. Itās an absolute one-off, and I loved it.
In the Miso Soup by Ryu Murakami, translated by Ralph McCarthy: Iāve only just discovered Ryu Murakami, more fool me, but Iāll be reading all his novels that have been translated from the original Japanese. Thereās no denying it, this novel is disturbing, with graphic scenes of murder that the pared-back writing makes all the more real. Kenji takes tourists on tours of Tokyoās sex bars where the body of a teenage girl has recently been discovered, and he begins to suspect his latest client, dead-eyed American Frank, who tells stories about his lobotomy and an ability to hypnotise.
Old Soul by Susan Barker: Descriptive and lush but full of action, Old Soul had my skin tingling. After a chance meeting at an airport, Jake and Marika realise their loved ones died in similar and disturbing circumstances, both linked by a mysterious woman. Jake sets out to find other people who have suffered the same way, presenting testimonies that finally lead him to a force he could never have imagined.Ā
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