Adrienne L's Reviews > Incidents Around the House
Incidents Around the House
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Incidents Around the House started off better than I was anticipating, to be honest. Ignoring the fact that the synopsis states Bela is 8 years-old when she is clearly more like 6 on paper, and the oft-repeated and annoying endearment of "Daddo," I found myself happily immersed and pleasantly chilled by a couple of early encounters with Other Mommy. But the novel couldn't maintain that promising beginning.
I know a lot of people are loving this book, but for me, the story and the storytelling used here were not enough to sustain its novel length, even taking into account the unusual formatting that actually makes the book much shorter than it is. I guess what I'm trying to say, is that this would have been much better as a short story or short novella. I get that Malerman was trying to do something different by relating events entirely from Bela's perspective, but I think the story would have been better served, and I would have been more invested in the fates of the characters, if we got at least some brief interludes from an adult perspective (grandma's and Lois' for instance, not the insufferable Mommy and Daddo). And for all the time spent in Bela's perspective, I still don't feel like I was in her head, like I got to know her. Kids aren't blank slates. Even for their limited years, they have memories and should have more depth and associations in relating events and making connections. Other horror writers have relayed stories from a young child's perspective in a much more effective and believable way (Stephen King with Danny Torrance in The Shining, for example). And when the family here took their act on the road and unleashed Other Mommy on various and sundry of their friends and relatives, things got repetitive fast and any inkling of creepiness went out the window.
Ultimately, despite some early creepiness and the quite frightening descriptions of Other Mommy, the scariest thing about Incidents Around the House was how awful Bela's parents were.
I know a lot of people are loving this book, but for me, the story and the storytelling used here were not enough to sustain its novel length, even taking into account the unusual formatting that actually makes the book much shorter than it is. I guess what I'm trying to say, is that this would have been much better as a short story or short novella. I get that Malerman was trying to do something different by relating events entirely from Bela's perspective, but I think the story would have been better served, and I would have been more invested in the fates of the characters, if we got at least some brief interludes from an adult perspective (grandma's and Lois' for instance, not the insufferable Mommy and Daddo). And for all the time spent in Bela's perspective, I still don't feel like I was in her head, like I got to know her. Kids aren't blank slates. Even for their limited years, they have memories and should have more depth and associations in relating events and making connections. Other horror writers have relayed stories from a young child's perspective in a much more effective and believable way (Stephen King with Danny Torrance in The Shining, for example). And when the family here took their act on the road and unleashed Other Mommy on various and sundry of their friends and relatives, things got repetitive fast and any inkling of creepiness went out the window.
Ultimately, despite some early creepiness and the quite frightening descriptions of Other Mommy, the scariest thing about Incidents Around the House was how awful Bela's parents were.
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Christine
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rated it 4 stars
Jul 17, 2024 09:34PM

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