The Facts: After a few years of not having enough time to read anything, I've basically insisted on carving out a few minutes a week to try and read anything for fun--basically anything that is not for class. Given my belief that most writers really do try to help out each other, I've decided to write reviews of everything I read in my particular genres: fantasy, dark fantasy, and horror at the moment. Maybe, at some point, one hopes, a little science fiction.
The Book: The Goat Parade by Peter S. Dudar (2018, Grinning Skull Press). I bought it from the author himself at the Moxie Festival in Lisbon Falls, Maine, this past summer.
The Review: The Goat Parade was both very
different and better than I expected it to be. I went into the book expecting a
good Satan-driven horror story, in the "booga-booga, devil's gonna
getcha!" style, which frankly, given Dudar's storytelling skill, would
have been pretty awesome.
Instead, what I got was a story about people, four in particular, whose lives were hurtling directly at each other, all due to the puppeteer's hands of a barely-glimpsed Satan. These people, of decidedly different moral and ethical stances, along with some others, find themselves manipulated in some cases, destined in others.
To what? Toward the ending, of course. I won't describe it,
but it is not what you expect it to be. This is a violent, intelligent horror story that...