A delightfully painful read: TOH is Stephen King for this generation.
5 stars
I recently read Children of Húrin. A challenging read. Last year I read @Olde_Heuvelt's HEX, that was a difficult read. This, is a painful read, a page-turning fight with every word. You feel every rock & slip on that mountain. WOW. TOH is Stephen King for this generation. ❤️&💔
This is probably one of the best books I've read this year, for personal reasons. It has outdoor adventure, horror, humor, and gay characters who aren't coming out or finding their first love, they're just gay and have lives. Thank you, Thomas Olde Heuvelt!
I really enjoyed the concept behind the story. However, the narration from Sam got annoying after awhile; I didn't love his speech patterns and they felt stodgy instead of what I'd expect from a young hipster. Luckily, there were some other narrators to break it up, but that also made the story a little confusing and jumbled at times. I didn't find the novel particularly scary or thrilling, but the mystery underlying what happened to the main character and others was intriguing and held my interest. Overall, the book seeemed too long, but I enjoyed it and found it very creative and original.
Nick and Sam would always joke about what would they do if one of them was horrifically injured beyond recognition, would they stay? They never expected it to happen. When Nick is rescued from a remote are in the Swiss Alps, he claims not to remember what happened, his climbing partner is missing presumed dead, and Nick’s injuries leave him unable to speak, wrapped up in bandages and a stranger to those who love him.
Echo has one of the creepiest openings ever, and it really got under my skin. It starts with Julia alone in a cabin, waiting for Sam to drive through a snow storm to reach her. But she’s not alone…what happens to her you have to wait until the end to find out. I loved HEX, so I was intrigued to see if Thomas Olde Huevelt could scare me …
Nick and Sam would always joke about what would they do if one of them was horrifically injured beyond recognition, would they stay? They never expected it to happen. When Nick is rescued from a remote are in the Swiss Alps, he claims not to remember what happened, his climbing partner is missing presumed dead, and Nick’s injuries leave him unable to speak, wrapped up in bandages and a stranger to those who love him.
Echo has one of the creepiest openings ever, and it really got under my skin. It starts with Julia alone in a cabin, waiting for Sam to drive through a snow storm to reach her. But she’s not alone…what happens to her you have to wait until the end to find out. I loved HEX, so I was intrigued to see if Thomas Olde Huevelt could scare me a second time, and he certainly managed that.
The horror genre has not always been kind to disfigurement. At first Sam can’t cope, he was drawn to Nick for his good looks and he feels like that person is lost. It must be a shock for all involved, and the narrative gives him time to realise he’s being a dick and you do see a loving relationship between them. The passages from Nick’s perspective shows that he both understands but is scared and alone, fearing what is underneath the bandages. At first you think that’s a metaphor, but in time you find out what his mask is holding in.
The chapters all start with a quote from a horror story, and in parts the journal style entries are reminiscent of classic horror. Nick himself has a trauma from the past, a cabin fire and his own demons to face, which mix up in his feelings of Sam and the Maudit. It’s pointed out on one occasion that if their French was better, the name of the mountain might have been a hint.
The pacing does struggle somewhat, a saggy middle which makes you wonder what else is there to tell. Nick’s account of what happened on that fateful expedition takes too much time going into technical details, like what rope he’s using. All the while they are aware of some malevolent supernatural force, yet descriptions of the terrain take precedence in his writings.
I did think the whole idea of a mountain possession was an interesting and unusual one. In the second half there are more accounts of the medical effects, and I liked the mix of modern science with the Gothic haunting elements.
The alpine choughs are depicted as death birds, come to peck out the souls of those lost to the mountain. I wasn’t quite sure about how they were kept in the village considering how it all plays out. Maybe there were just a few too many ideas mixed in.
Overall, I’m glad I read Echo, even if I was left feeling like there were creepy people standing on the stairs…