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A Horror Book Review from Craig DiLouie's The Children of Red Peak

Updated: Apr 10, 2021


 A Horror Book Review from Craig DiLouie's The Children of Red Peak  (Daily Strange Special Cover)
A Horror Book Review from Craig DiLouie's The Children of Red Peak (Daily Strange Special Cover)

Bram Stoker Award-nominated author Craig DiLouie creates a brand-new twist to the cult horror story within a heart-pounding novel of mental suspense.


David Young, Deacon Price, and also Beth Harris exist with a deep secret. As kids, they made it through a religious group's horrific very last days at the remote mountain Red Peak. Years later, the stress of what they encountered never feels long behind.


When a fellow survivor commits suicide, they eventually reunite and share the stories of theirs. Long-repressed memories surface area, defying belief, and understanding. Why did their households go down such a rich road? What really occurred on that last night?



The responses lie buried for Red Peak. But the truth of the matter has a cost, and escaping the next time might demand the supreme sacrifice.


Book Review


Obviously, this guide isn't for the faint of center, and also for people who have had some type of religion pushed upon them, they need to steer clear of that one since it actually does lay blank the hypocrisy of Christianity within the extreme forms of its, that will most likely trigger a number of great individuals. After looking at this graphic memoir of approximately one person's escape originating from a religious cult, I am not surprised just how widespread these groups in fact are, and the concept that a lot of people are able to make a living attempting to draw out folks from cults is completely credible. DiLouie does a good job of portraying the good reasons folks join organizations this way in the very first place, as not surprisingly, they pretty much always start off with intentions that are good.




This particular book's particular team starts off good, happy, and pretty normal. The explanations of their town remind me of an Amish or maybe Quaker settlement; no modern-day comforts, though a lot of food, a desire, and positive communications to just be much better while still being in the position to express individual freedoms. It is when the team becomes certain they have to shift to Red Peak because' the ascension' was originating that elements may take a dark turn. Slowly a team psychosis takes over, which eventually ends in extensive death. Rather than utilizing mental illness as well as peer pressure as reason, DiLouie subtly weaves within the suggestion of a greater power which leads to the unusual disappearance of the systems. It is not until the really last pages that the unknown is finally solved.



Apart from the lingering question of what's at the rear of the disappearance (and earn note, I was surprised with the ending!) DiLouie draws away from the show of what really happened those last few hrs by dipping us inside and not the character's childhoods. We swing forth and back between these 2 time periods, which gradually builds suspense while filling with the life of every character and the present-day coping mechanisms of theirs. Because David and Beth each grow to be therapists/counselors of kinds, we receive a look into the scientific explanations of the groups, the reason they exist, the effect of theirs on people's cognitive growth, as well as the trouble one has removing themselves from the stress of childhood. These backstories help to create the whole narrative much more credible, so although the situations described are actually worrisome, they're also completely convincing. It felt as if I was reading through an amazing true-crime story having an entertaining cast of figures, and also since I was creeped out from beginning to end, I absolutely recommend this guide to enthusiasts of this horror genre.

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