WinterPeople

This book was terrifying.  Delightfully so.  I rarely get so wholly absorbed.  I read all the time, but it is as time allows – a quiet hour on the weekend or a few minutes before bed.  With this book, I was making time to read so I could keep up with its breathless pace. I even made something easy for dinner so I could read more and cook less.

McMahon tells a tale via two main points in time (with a couple more moments for context) — present day and 1908.  It is set on the same plot of land, a farm in West Hall, Vermont.  The world we find is cold, hard, barren and bleak.  Nothing can be farmed.  everyone is just in survival mode — stay warm until spring.

The story is couched in the framework of a diary from 1908 of Sara Harrison Shea, a decidedly unreliable narrator who admits at the outset that those around her think she has gone mad.  She has created a “sleeper” — brought the dead back to life, for just seven days.  There is some sort of ancient evil that lives in the woods, up at a rock formation called the Devil’s Hand.  Everyone in town acknowledges it but never tries to define it.

In present day, two daughters and their single mother eke out a all-natural, herbal existence.  Off-the-grid and quiet around the town, the mother’s disappearance is little noted by anyone except her daughters.  While looking for clues to their mother’s whereabouts, they discover a copy of Sara’s diary hidden in the floorboards of the bedroom.  Soon it will become clear that the past and present are very much linked.

McMahon’s atmospheric writing is so chilling.   She uses cold, solid words to evoke the sense of bleakness and ruthlessness of a New England winter.

She was sitting on the floor in front of the closet, wearing her thin nightgown, her bare feet as pale as marble against the dark floor.  She was shivering.
She did not move, did not seem to even hear him.  Worry gnawed at his insides like an ugly rat.  Loc. 1652

and in the present day:

No cars passed.  There was no sound at all.  the muffled silence of the snowy landscape seemed so unnatural, as if the world had been draped in cotton.  the only things she heard were the wind and the sound of her own footsteps squeaking through the fluffy snow.  Loc. 2661

McMahon even evokes Poe and the eye (“the eye of a vulture –a pale blue eye, with a film over it. Whenever it fell upon me, my blood ran cold”) in “The Tell-Tale Heart”:

I hated that milky-white moon that seemed to see everything and nothing all at once.  Loc. 123

For my part, I slightly preferred the 1908 sections more than the present day.  Something about the lack of technology and easy travel makes the idea of seclusion all the more frightening.  Still, the book is consistently well-written.  It is suspenseful (with very little direct violence or graphic gore) and taut, and precisely what one should read next to the fire on a snowy day.

Read via NetGalley
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Hardcover: 336 pages
Publisher: Doubleday (February 11, 2014)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0385538499
ISBN-13: 978-0385538497