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David's Reviews > Mother Howl

Mother Howl by Craig Clevenger
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really liked it
bookshelves: audiobook, horror, serial-killers, crime, contemporary

This was an odd book to tag, genre-wise. Clevenger writes in a literary style (many long and almost dreamy passages and internal dialogues). The story seems like a straightforward thriller: the main character is the son of a serial killer trying to escape his past. There's a crazy homeless guy, however, who knows who he is, and has a message for him, from the "Mother Howl."

That last character is what places this book in a strange place. Chapters alternate between the main character, Lyle Edison, and "Icarus," who is an angel who just landed on Earth in a "meat body" on a mission to deliver a message to Lyle. Or he's a crazy homeless schizophrenic. Their respective chapters are both narrated in third person limited omniscient, and Icarus's internal monologue is very consistent and plausible as either an angel trapped in a monkey-suit or a crazy homeless guy. It's never explained precisely why he needs to deliver a message to Lyle, and his chapters, after a while, fade away as some interesting secondary internal dialog.

Lyle Edison (not his real name) was a teenager when his perfectly normal father was revealed as a serial killer who had raped and murdered at least nine women. Lyle spent the rest of his childhood and teen years getting beaten up every time he's recognized. He was unfortunately a "Junior," sharing a name with his now-infamous father, so he was unable to get a job anywhere. Eventually he resorted to paying a shady forger for false identification, and has now spent his adulthood living under a forged name. In the process, through an unfortunate series of events (this guy has the worst luck in the world), he got caught holding a drug package for a "friend," which resulted in a possession with intent to distribute charge. Now he's on parole, with a pregnant wife, and a parole officer who's well written as the absolute worst and pettiest little tyrant ever.

This was a great story and I really felt for poor Lyle, who's had an absolutely shitty life through no fault of his own. Yes, buying fake papers was a mistake, and he's made other mistakes, but they were all understandable given his circumstances. He now struggles with anger issues, and when he occasionally mouths off and the reader (and later his wife) wants to strangle him for being so foolish, at the same time you can't really blame him. He's been getting kicked around since he was a kid, and it would take the patience and stoicism of a saint not to lose it eventually. Much of the book is Lyle white-knuckling it to the end of his parole, while he (and the reader) wonder if he'll make it.

Icarus's chapters, like I said, were strange and almost ethereal, and they actually could have been cut without affecting the plot too much, but I think they definitely added a touch of the otherworldly.

Inevitably, we know Lyle will eventually have to confront his father's legacy, and I think the climax was executed well.

This was an unusual book with some really sympathetic characters, and an overall theme of just how hard it is to be a little person being crushed in the gears of impersonal or malevolent bureaucracy.
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Reading Progress

November 6, 2024 – Started Reading
November 6, 2024 – Shelved
November 6, 2024 – Shelved as: audiobook
November 6, 2024 – Shelved as: horror
November 6, 2024 – Shelved as: serial-killers
November 6, 2024 – Shelved as: crime
November 14, 2024 – Finished Reading
November 15, 2024 – Shelved as: contemporary

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