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Dan Schwent's Reviews > Dead Sea

Dead Sea by Tim Curran
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really liked it
bookshelves: 2014

A freighter bound for South America gets enshrouded in a fog bank and emerges in another dimension, a graveyard of ships choked with carnivorous weeds, tentacled nasties of all shape and size, and a mysterious entity that wants them all dead. But will the survivors of the initial shipwreck manage to avoid killing one another long enough to escape horrors beyond human understanding?

Geek Alert: When I was a kid, I was way into cryptids, UFOs, and, of course, the mysteries of the sea. Since this book references both Bermuda Triangle and the Sargasso Sea, I was all over it.

Dead Sea is a paranoid survival horror story, very much a forerunner of Tim Curran's upcoming novella, Blackout. Two groups of survivors fight for their lives against horrible crustacean-fish things, squid- and jellyfish-like horrors, spidery things, and all sorts of other things that man was never meant to lay eyes upon.

Curran mines centuries of sea lore and spins something approaching gold with it. I'm not in a hurry to return to the ocean after reading this or even put my toe in any body of water that I can't see the bottom of. The characters gradually slide closer to the edge of sanity as they encounter centuries old ships and the squamous horrors of a world with two moons and time that flows differently than ours.

The characters do a lot to keep the story going forward. When the horror doesn't come from the environment, it comes from the disintegrating sanity of the shipmates and from Saks, the biggest asshole this side of Galactus's. Seriously, I could not wait for the rest of the survivors punch his ticket.

The ending was pretty satisfying. In a tale like this, you don't expect happily ever after, just a handful of characters better off than the rest. That's pretty much what we got.

In many ways, this book feels like a trial run for Blackout. For me, Blackout is Dead Sea 2.0, a condensed and refined version of the original. If Dead Sea is beer, Blackout is fine bourbon. Since I can't really fault Curran's earlier work being as spectacular as his most recent stuff, I'm still giving this a four, even though it had to work for it.
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Reading Progress

June 15, 2014 – Started Reading
June 15, 2014 – Shelved
June 16, 2014 –
16.0%
June 17, 2014 –
23.0%
June 17, 2014 –
46.0%
June 18, 2014 –
62.0%
June 18, 2014 –
90.0%
June 18, 2014 – Shelved as: 2014
June 18, 2014 – Finished Reading

Comments Showing 1-3 of 3 (3 new)

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message 1: by Trudi (new) - added it

Trudi This actually sounds like something I would like, Dan and Curran sounds like an author I need to check out (every time I see his name I think of Tim Curry which makes me think of Pennywise -- we alllll float down here!)


message 2: by Dan (new) - rated it 4 stars

Dan Schwent Blackout is still up on Netgalley. That would be a good way to sample Curran.


mark monday I'm stoked you liked this one. I thought it was awesome. I wonder if I have Blackout on my kindle... my last Curran experience was not so good (Hag Night) but I'm willing to give him another shot or two. I liked this one so much, I bought a hard copy.

Trudi, I think this is right up your alley. visceral, just the way you like it.


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