Literary Horror discussion
Monthly Reads
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Feb 2020 monthly read: Andrew Michael Hurley's Starve Acre
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Please dive in! I'm having a little trouble getting my hands on a copy, but don't wait for me. I'll keep checking in on the forum thread.


Needless to say, I *really* liked this. I felt it was fluently and skillfully written in a style that was literary but fairly easygoing and quick to read. As in the previous Hurley novel we've read here, the story builds slowly but each new development carries enough weight and weirdness that moving forward seems compulsory.
I'll hold off on commenting further until others have read a bit. I hope the rest of you enjoy this as much as I did!



It's well written and definitely a quick read. I'm a little puzzled with how part one ends, but I look forward to finishing, probably tomorrow night.



Yes, I very much agree, Janie! I went back and read the poems that preface the book and they meant a great deal more after finishing it.
I think this book falls under the the category of new British folk horror and I wonder if it was commissioned as such. Hurley actually says something about a commission in the acknowledgments (commissioned for this particular publisher, I think) but I can't find anything specific about this online. In any case, it's a very creepy, very gothic, very British book and I think the whole small village surrounded by a wood aspect plays into that beautifully. Reminds me just a tiny bit of Bernard Taylor's rural gothics, but in a lower key.


I have never read Bernard Taylor, but I plan to now.

https://www.goodreads.com/poll/show/1...
Remember, if you vote, and your choice wins, you are committing to participate in the forum discussion.
A couple reviews:
https://www.theguardian.com/books/201...
https://www.sublimehorror.com/books/s...
It doesn't seem to be available as an e-book. But there are a number of relatively inexpensive copies online.
Let's plan on starting a week from Monday, 2/10 ish.