Oh, Horrors!

It’s not realistic to hope that you will get the same white-knuckled, stay-up-all-night feeling of reading Stephen King for the first time from any current author in the horror genre. With that said, I stayed up late into the night reading Ania Ahlborn’s “The Bird Eater.” It wasn’t the best I’ve ever read, but it reminded me enough of King’s work to keep me going and in the end, to be not too disappointed. In fact, I may download a few of her other titles. It’s the tale of a broken man who returns home to confront the family ghosts. In the process he gets a chance to revisit the girl he first kissed and to learn a lot about not recovering from grief. I don’t want to tell you much more than this as I’d hate to ruin the suspense for you. “The Bird Eater” is a satisfying read — especially if you are house-sitting at an old farmhouse on a dead-end road as I was when I read it. Ahlborn has some truly great, cinematic images in which the lead character, Aaron, struggles with his doppelganger demon who has a penchant for birds. Her language is deft and though repetitive, it does the job. She shines at describing the haunted house in which the bulk of the action takes place, and if her version of Arkansas is at all accurate, I can only say I worry for most of the people who live there. Her work is descriptive, page-turning and will make a good little movie when it comes to that. I felt the first chapter gave away too much of the story, leading me to read on mostly to see how it was going to come together rather than being trapped in my desire to see what was going to happen next. I think the scary boy (why are little kids so terrifying?) would have been much more frightening and the psychological development of the main characters much more intriguing if we had been allowed to take the trip along with them. This book reads a bit more like a TV “We-know-who-done-it” murder mystery than a ghost story. I suggest you skip the first chapter until you have gotten sucked in enough to want to know more background. A Polish transplant, Ania Ahlborn self-published her first book, “Seed,” and rose quickly to the top of the “as-good-as-King” ranks. She followed it with “The Neighbors” and the “The Shuddering.” She has a great blog accessible through her website: www.aniaahlborn.com. “The Bird Eaters” is available at Amazon and major retailers.

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Provided

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