Genre: Horror
Publisher: Great Old Ones Publishing
Publication Date: 4th July 2016
Pages: 131
REVIEWED BY NEV
A copy of The
Sludge was sent to Confessions of a Reviewer by the author, David Bernstein,
in exchange for an honest review. This is said review. This book is published
by Great Old Ones Publishing.
Sometimes this reviewing game throws you surprises. A lot
in fact. A lot of welcome surprises. One of them that never fails to amaze me
is the fact that, sometimes you read someone’s work and rave about it. Then you
pick up something else of theirs and it doesn’t do a lot for you. When you
review it, you automatically think that is the last you will hear from that
author. Think this reviewing lark is easy? It’s a minefield I tell you.
David Bernstein’s last book, A mixed Bag of Blood was a
collection that I didn’t really connect with. Don’t get me wrong, I enjoyed it,
but it didn’t grab me the way some of his other stuff has.
I was delighted when David sent me a copy of The Sludge to review. Firstly, because
he hadn’t fallen out with me, and secondly because…..well…..just look at that
cover! It screams old skool horror! I couldn’t wait to get my teeth into it.
This is what I thought.
Bull and John are removing some toxic waste. They should
dispose of it carefully but they are just going to dump it in Lolo National
Forest.
They throw it in a lake and it mixes with some stuff they
dumped years ago and starts a chain of events that will create a monster no one
thought could ever exist.
Cole and Derrick are brothers. They are about to rob a
bank with their friend, Dirk. The plan is to hide out in Lolo after the job is
done.
Edgar, June, Kim and Tyler are hiking in Lolo when they
stumble across the camp belonging to the brothers. Everyone is in for the shock
of their lives.
The
Sludge is brewing.
Our characters in this one are bloody brilliant. Bull and
John aren’t in it for too long so can’t say much about them other than they are
twats for what they did. Cole and Derrick are brilliant. Small time criminals
with big time ambitions convinced that robbing a bank is the answer to their
prayers. They probably would have been right if they picked somewhere else to
hide out.
Edgar and June are a couple. Both outdoor types and
totally into their hiking. June is a nurse and seems to be pretty worldly wise
but Edgar is a different matter. Kim and Tyler are a couple too. Kim is like
Edgar and Tyler like June. Seems to me like they should swap. They also keep a
lot of secrets.
Then of course we have The Sludge. I’m not going to tell you what it is or what it looks
like. Just look at the cover. How it comes to be is unrealistic and nothing
short of fantasy but you know what? It is superb. Think B movie person in a
rubber suit type monster. Stupid in one sense but creepy in another.
The plot is simple. Take the three situations mentioned
above and mix them all together and throw in some sludge. The thing that I love
about the way David Bernstein writes this stuff though is that although the
plot is simple and follows a certain path, it is unpredictable. You can guess
what way things are going to go. The chances are you will be wrong though. The
variables always change when you don’t expect them to. It’s like a
rollercoaster you have never been on before. You know you are going to get
thrills but you just don’t know when or where.
Mr Bernstein has a knack for writing stories that make
you feel at ease very early. You feel like you belong. You can imagine yourself
being there watching everything that is happening or even taking part yourself.
He makes it believable. This is why I enjoy his stuff so much. There is nothing
complicated about it. You can set it down for days on end if you wanted to and
when you pick it up again you don’t have to try and remind yourself what the
story was doing. It hits you as soon as you start to read again.
I have a negative though. Not enough horror for me. When
you start to learn of The Sludge’s transformation – from what, and into what, I
am not going to tell you – it is horrific. You will cringe at the description
of how it interacts with a human. You will feel sick. You may hold onto parts
of your body very tightly.
When it makes an appearance in the story, it is
genuinely creepy and tense. It just doesn’t happen enough for me. Doesn’t make
the story any worse, it just could have been a bit scarier.
To summarise: a good old fashioned monster story that
could be directly out of a comic. Brilliant characters again that are easy to
read and make the story flow very well. Just needed some more scares for me.
General rating:
★★★★ nearly there.
Horror rating:
★★★ needed more for me.
If you would like to help support Confessions of a
Reviewer, then please consider using the links below to buy The Sludge or any other books from David.
This not only supports me but also lets me know how many people actually like
to buy books after reading my reviews.
Thanks.
Book Synopsis:
Deep in Montana's Lolo National Forest, toxic waste is
leaking from aged oil drums and mixing with a new batch of biological sludge
that has been dumped into a remote lake. It sickens, it mutates, and like
cancer, it spreads and devours.
A group of hiker’s stumble upon bank robbers who've been
hiding out in the forest. Held at gunpoint, they soon discover they are being
hunted by a vicious predator, and it will take their combined efforts to make
it out of the forest alive.
CONFESSIONS REVIEWS DAVID BERNSTEIN
I am a dark fiction writer, a horror writer. I write the gamut, from atmospheric horror to extreme gory horror to dark fiction and dark thriller, oh, and the occasional bizarro tale.
Gory: The Unhinged, Damaged Souls, Witch Island, Apartment 7C, Amongst the Dead
Extreme horror: The Unhinged (you were warned)
Horror with a twist: The Tree Man, Apartment 7C
Zombie fiction: Machines of the Dead trilogy. Amongst the Dead.
Darkfuse horror: Relic of Death, Surrogate, Skinner (coming July 2015)
Dark thriller/supernatural/ action: Tears of No Return, Toxic Behemoth
Monster horror: Toxic Behemoth (Deep Sea/Kaiju book)
Bizarro/Gross out/funny horror: Fecal Terror
And for more about David, visit his site or find him on social media:
Website – Facebook – Twitter – Goodreads – Amazon Page - Sinister Grin Press
Website – Facebook – Twitter – Goodreads – Amazon Page - Sinister Grin Press
I'm intrigued. Sounds like a Troma film, mixed with the pallet of Guy N. Smith ... which, believe me, is high praise! So may have to get myself a copy on Kindle.
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