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Brian Evenson, Peter Straub: Last Days (Paperback, 2016, Coffee House Pr, Coffee House Press) 4 stars

Review of 'Last Days' on 'Goodreads'

5 stars

B r u h

Okay, so this isn't my first time reading Evenson; I read Song for the Unraveling of the World earlier this year, but that was a short story collection. Last Days is a single novella-length story, which worked much better for me. This was a story and protagonist I'm glad was given the time and attention to be fleshed out, because it was one hell of a ride.

Typically with a three-act layout you have the protagonist with some kind of major character flaw who eventually learns to overcome it and you see them progress and change by the end of the book. Kline absolutely was changed by the end of this story, but he was changed because he never kicked the trait of being curious to a fault. He never learned his lesson and after everything I saw about him, it'd be weirder if he did. It was rewarding to read a work that managed to intentionally and successfully buck the trend; not everyone gets a happy ending, and that's not always a bad thing (for the reader anyway).

This is also an extremely violent book. But it's not written in a way where the violence is the point, or the thing you're supposed to be looking and squirming at - it's not torture porn for its own sake. Rather it's more of a tool the characters use to achieve their goals, and it's approached with such a casual attitude that towards the end you start becoming as numb to it as the people carrying it out. A faceless, nameless security guard could be introduced and murdered in the same sentence and it makes sense within the prose. In that way, the latter half of this book reads almost like a shoot-em-up action movie, but instead of fun or campiness there's a pervading sense of desperation and anger.

The prose was tight and sparing, only giving you what you needed without embellishment. The pacing worked well and there was consistent momentum that had me constantly pushing to squeeze in one more chapter. And there was one twist near the two thirds point that had me physically putting the book down feeling like I'd just been slapped (in a good way). Everything here just worked for me.

(Side note: If you get the version with the introduction by Peter Straub, maybe skip it until you finish the main story because it had some spoilers in it.)