This was a mixed bag for me, surprising because it had a lot going against it as it started.
First, the general scenario - I'm too old for S.E. Hinton with lashings of heroin/prostitution and if I wanted to read about down-and-outers, I'd reach for Nelson Algren's MAN WITH THE GOLDEN ARM (still one of the best books I've ever read about addiction) or the always reliable W.S.B. Oh, the names and ages and general geography change but the outcome is usually the same. And, of course, it was a fair stretch to call it horror, even with the horrible things going on and a murder - I still contend that people having to deal with bad things in their life is a little too broad a definition for Horror and happily await the debut of Crimepod so that stories like this and DEER KILLER have a place to exist happily.
Then, the style itself wasn't particularly engaging - too many characters introduced too quickly (I actually thought there was a "Yvonne" and an "Ivan" at some point, but that's more the readers fault - *hint that will probably never get to be used effectively* Theda's name was pronounced "Theeda" Bara, long e - it was an accidental (?) anagram of "Death Arab"). Stosh was barely a character and the heroin girl even less so (just there as an object lesson, I guess). The writing could have been a bit more naturalistic and less flowery (I understand the temptation), especially with the seedy setting. Overall, the story felt more like the mid-point in some young adult's novel that was a little too blunt/real for the market (not an inherently bad thing, better than being some tweener novel, for sure), with implications that some of the characters had already been sketched/served their plot purpose in preceding chapters, or would in chapters to come. Again, not a bad thing, except it was presented as a single story, so that's what we should get.
Which leads us to the last problem - climax/point of it all. Not much there, really. Oh, yeah, some people are wicked nasty bad and (I'm not being sarcastic here) some people are always going to need to be warned about that through stories like this, I guess. Although it's not my place to say, I'm sure surprised it was a generic killing that resulted, what with your cruel and savvy female dealer/pimp knowing torture freaks who videotape stuff and johns with violent tastes, I would surely have expected her to have concocted something much more vicious for the girl that happened to make a few grand on the side (disposable, unmissable teenagers, especially girls, always rate a high price). I guess I'm just surprised, considering it featured characters that seemed to have escaped from some My Life With The Thrill Kill Kult song, how tame the ending was. I'm just saying....
And yet, by the end, and with all it's problems, I found myself happy I'd listened to it because, much like LALA SALAMA and THE TEACHER (and possibly PATTERN MASTERS) I found myself thinking, this writer has a lot of potential and good chops and will probably produce excellent work in the future. So thank you, Pseudopod, for giving them a venue.
Two last things (thread discussions) - as a born and bred Jersey shore resident, this felt very much Left Coast to me, not "Joisey" at all (I didn't get the impression they'd driven cross-country, more like up California). And I liked the reading, after starting slightly unhappy with it. It might have seemed a bit more cartoonish with a "heavy" read.
Thanks for listening.
“I know that if I was a 16-year-old who’d seen Kids, Havoc, Bully, Alpha Dog, Wassup Rockers and Thirteen, I’d probably feel like the whole teenaged world was one giant omni-sexual drugged-up orgy I hadn’t been invited to.”
Review of HAVOC from the Onion AV Club.