Stranger Still

I didn’t find out that “Stranger Still” was a sequel to “Strangers” until after finishing the book and reading the Author’s Note. Oops. All the same, I only noticed a large learning curve in the prologue as the story poetically introduces Legion (who used to be One).





Quick Plot Introduction: Danielle is a lawyer who strives to give criminals only the justice they need. She’s newly wed to Alex, and during their drive to their honeymoon, they’re kidnapped by Sheldon Steward (a happy torturer), and taken to Marcos (a meth-maker staging a revolution in the Russian mob). Legion follows as the Byronic Hero that he is. Anything from Legion’s perspective is in Present Tense, which would normally throw me off, (especially when the other four perspectives are in Past Tense), but the writing and story flowed well enough that I usually didn’t notice the change of tenses for a couple paragraphs.





The characters are what really make this book gleam (they would shine, but it’s a horror). They each have tormenting flaws and some righteous reasoning for their actions. By chapter five, I wanted a series about Legion (lucky me, there’s the first book), who Kronks it out with his shoulder angel and devil. I was surprised to find myself rooting for Legion and laughing with Sheldon despite their twisted characters.





There are some interesting themes about punishments for crimes/sins, though I suppose that’s only expected when you put a lawyer, mobster, torturer, and morals fanatic in a chamber. (That sounds like the beginning of a bad joke).
Speaking of bad jokes, I had to laugh in chapter twelve at the words “I’m so tired…” considering Michaelbrent Collings’ Facebook posts during Covid-19.





To anyone who enjoys reading horror, I definitely recommend this one. It’s creepy, comical, and intriguing.
It’s also relatively clean for a horror. There’s enough swearing to rate this PG-13, but not R (no F-bombs!). There are sexual references, groping, and rape threats, but no sex scenes. Since it’s horror, there is some blood or a disturbing scene in every chapter. The gore is mostly methodical torture, not slasher. *****4.8 Stars**** That might shift one or two tenths after I read “Strangers.”




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Rating: 5 out of 5.


PS. I hope the next Legion book deals with Lucy. There’s definitely something creepy to develop there.
PPS. I’m an official beta reader for Michaelbrent Collings, so you can expect more reviews of books by him.

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Published on July 22, 2020 04:00
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