2012 Book 72: INK

Dec 27, 2012 02:30

I haven't run any book reviews here since July, and even then I was way behind. I may post a catch-up list of what I've read throughout the year, but for now, here's my latest book reviews:

Book 72: INK  by Damien Walters Grintalis, isb 9781619210721, 300 pages, Samhain Publishing, $16.00

Premise: A tattoo can be a work of art...or a curse. The devil is in the details.
When Jason Harford meets the tattoo artist he nicknames Sailor, a little ink seems like the perfect thing to help celebrate his return to the single world. After all, his ex-wife hates body art. Sailor’s work is nothing short of extraordinary. The griffin tattoo looks real enough to climb out of his skin, and if Jason changes his mind, Sailor also specializes in tattoo removal. With new ink and a new girlfriend, life is good for Jason. Until he hears the flutter of wings in the night. Until he finds drops of blood staining his sheets. Until he discovers a brick wall where the tattoo shop should be. Jason hunts Sailor down and demands answers. The truth is as sharp as a needle, as dark as the ink in his skin, and comes with a heavy price.

My Rating: 5 stars

My Thoughts: Damien Walters Grintalis' first novel builds on the promise shown in her published short stories: characterization, solid pacing and a very good sense of when and when not to show us the monster/evil/gore.  With the exception of a few key cut-away scenes, Grintalis keeps us firmly in Jason's point of view throughout the book. Thanks to this, we understand why he reaches the (false) conclusions about what's going on that he reaches. In Jason, we're not given just another horror novel lead who is oblivious despite the signs -- we're given someone who sees logical explanations for what's going on around him, until he reaches a point where he realizes what we've known all along: nothing is as it seems. Jason is a character who starts out an emotional wreck, finds a new inner-strength, and then comes to doubt/lose that strength as the real world falls away and he has to make a choice to be the wreck or the strong one. This character arc for Jason is the heart of the book and what makes it not just another gory book about tattoos-gone-bad.

In fact, there isn't a lot of on-screen gore throughout most of the novel. We're given hints about what happens off-screen, but Jason largely sees only the aftermath of these events. This is key not only in allowing him to continue to be slightly oblivious to the truth, but also to the pacing of the novel and the ratcheting up of suspense that Grintalis does so well, and makes the use of gore later in the story that much more effective.

Several supporting characters are well-drawn (pun intended) as well: Jason's ex-wife Shelley, his mother and father, and his new girlfriend Mitch all add flavor to the story. if I have any complaint about the supporting cast, it's that so many of them are so well-crafted that it becomes extremely noticeable when a character is lacking in characterization: Alex, the gum-chewing kid from up the block, feels like a macguffin at the most, a place-holder at the least. For a character mentioned so often and who is a focus of Jason's rationalizations for what's going on, he feels the most "stock" of the supporting cast.

And then there's the tattoo artist Jason calls  "Sailor," who goes by the name John S. Iblis.  "Sailor" creeped me out from the first scene he appears in, and continued to be no less creepy (and in fact, far more so) as the book goes on. Most astute horror readers will recognize right away who "Sailor" actually is, but that doesn't take away from the story itself; who he is isn't the central mystery, after all. What he wants, and whether he'll get it or not, is the question. A question Grintalis answers solidly in a climactic scene that is a bloody, intense, tidal-shifting ride even though it never leaves one room.

damien walters grintalis, book review

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