Showing posts with label Apartment 16. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Apartment 16. Show all posts

Thursday, 28 April 2011

Book Review | The Ritual by Adam Nevill


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When four old University friends set off into the Scandinavian wilderness of the Arctic Circle, they aim to briefly escape the problems of their lives and reconnect with one another. But when Luke, the only man still single and living a precarious existence, finds he has little left in common with his well-heeled friends, tensions rise.


With limited fitness and experience between them, a shortcut meant to ease their hike turns into a nightmare scenario that could cost them their lives. Lost, hungry, and surrounded by forest untouched for millennia, Luke figures things couldn’t possibly get any worse.


But then they stumble across an old habitation. Ancient artefacts decorate the walls and there are bones scattered upon the dry floors. The residue of old rites and pagan sacrifice for something that still exists in the forest. Something responsible for the bestial presence that follows their every step. And as the four friends stagger in the direction of salvation, they learn that death doesn’t come easy among these ancient trees...



***

If you go down to the woods today, whatever you do, heed this one warning: don't take The Ritual with. It'll scare the sense of adventure right out of you.



Hot on the heels of last year's smash hit horror Apartment 16, rising star Adam Nevill returns to wreak havoc on your dreams once more - and on career-best form, for The Ritual is superb. It is from start to finish a far more ambitious book than its predecessor, for the larger part a substantially more effective one, and wreathed throughout with such wonderfully evocative exposition as to engender an atmosphere equal parts awful and exquisite.


But let's meet the gang.


Our main man, Luke, is in truth a bit of a layabout. Having bounced from job to job back home, and woman to woman - but of course - he looks back on his years at Uni, when he shared a Birmingham bedsit with Hutch and Dom and Phil, as "the best days of his life. Of all their lives, he liked to think." (p.45) But that was lifetime ago, and though he and Hutch have kept in touch, hiking together all their adult lives, Luke fears he's grown apart from Phil and Dom... or else them from him. He's right to be afraid.


One drunken night at a wedding reception, the former flatmates plot to renew their acquaintance. Six months later, they meet together in Sweden, to tramp and camp in the pristine wilderness of the North. All too soon, however, tensions begin to flare, and it becomes apparent that neither Phil nor Dom are fit enough to blaze the trail our dab hands had planned. A short-cut is negotiated, through a forest a ways away from the beaten track. The boys go "off piste," where "there are no trails." (p.9)


Bad move.


Because something is waiting for them in the woods. Something so horrific none of them can even begin to conceive of the harm it must mean. Something "from times before symbols and languages could depict such things that hunted and meant murder." (p.208)


The unremitting wilderness of sub-Arctic Sweden is of course a landscape far removed from the luxury London apartments of Adam Nevill's last effort, and it is a grand conjuration indeed; grand and quite, quite terrifying. Luke and his cronies of old quickly find themselves lost in a world stood still, utterly apart from all we can comprehend, and therein the unknowableness of the night, and the horrors it could hold, come front and centre.


Rather too front and centre, as it happens, for in the last act the evil is exposed and explained, and unmasked, the thing loses much of its darkly sparkling lustre. Come to that, the entire last third of The Ritual marks an abrupt about-turn in tenor and in tone so sustained that it serves to dispel the massing thunderheads of terror and tension Nevill so delicately evokes in the early-going. Without getting all spoilery, the aforementioned evil, as it happens, turns out to be "inevitable, relentless and predictable. Imaginative, he'd give it that much, but soulless." (p.341)


That said, the sense of place Nevill establishes in The Ritual is simply excellent; to a one, his characters are naturalistic, and easy to believe in; and the horror that haunts them, before it is so rudely revealed, is truly a chilling thing. Thus, The Ritual can only come highly recommended. It has its faults - foremost amongst them the profoundly unhelpful compulsion to explain what should by all rights be inexplicable and a few lamentably transparent attempts to instil in the reader a pre-existing sense of foreboding (see p.25) - yet these are familiar Achilles heels in horror, and it is in the final accounting tremendously easy to overlook the selfsame issues the genre's grandmasters still stumble upon in an author with such promise and talent and ambition as England's answer to Stephen King, Adam Nevill.

***

The Ritual
by Adam Nevill


UK Publication: May 2011, Pan


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Recommended and Related Reading


Wednesday, 27 October 2010

Adam Nevill and the Case of the Happy Halloween

So one of the year's horror highlights - though I'd say the pickings have been somewhat slim so far - undoubtedly has to be former pornographer Adam Nevill's Apartment 16. You can read the review entire here.

Now it wasn't an entirely perfect novel, but suffice it to say Adam's time as a night watchman made this superbly creepy luxury London apartment-set narrative one to stick with you long after you've turned that last page.

Needless to say, I'm rather looking forward to the next novel from Mr. Nevill - and what do you know? I just came across an extract of it on the Pan Macmillan page. You should really go read it. It's short and sharp, an ideal bit of whetting. If my little birdies aren't misinforming me, The Ritual is due out in May 2011.

The gent's even composed a bit of flash fiction to help bring in Halloween, hasn't he? That's here. It'll take you all of a minute to get through and you'll be all the readier to poke evil midgets who come begging for candy in the eye - as well you should - once you're done.

What riches!

Monday, 5 April 2010

Book Review: Apartment 16 by Adam Nevill


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"In Barrington House, an upmarket block in London, there is an empty apartment. No one goes in, no one comes out. And it’s been that way for fifty years. Until the night watchman hears a disturbance after midnight and investigates. What he experiences is enough to change his life forever.

"A young American woman, Apryl, arrives at Barrington House. She's been left an apartment by her mysterious Great Aunt Lillian who died in strange circumstances. Rumours claim Lillian was mad. But her diary suggests she was implicated in a horrific and inexplicable event decades ago."

"Determined to learn something of this eccentric woman, Apryl begins to unravel the hidden story of Barrington House. She discovers that a transforming, evil force still inhabits the building. And the doorway to Apartment 16 is a gateway to something altogether more terrifying...

***


Press a successful author into advising young hopefuls on the tricks of their trade and as often as not, they proffer something along the lines of this little gem: write what you know. Let's put aside for a moment the fact that Adam Neville has written nine erotic novels under the name Lindsay Gordon. His second horror novel, after the occult thriller Banquet of the Damned, is the dark and disturbing tale of a porter working the night shift in Barrington House, an upmarket block of flats in the west end. This much Neville certainly knows, having worked "from 2000 to 2004 [as] both nightwatchman and day porter in the exclusive apartment buildings of west London," and so it's no surprise that Apartment 16 is an authentic depiction of life as a dogsbody for a block packed full of the privileged and the pompous.

Seth and Apryl are neither. An impoverished artist moonlighting as the night porter in Barrington House, Seth lives in a seedy flat above the Green Man pub; Apryl, meanwhile, is an alternative thirtysomething American newly arrived in London to sell off her late great-aunt's flat. The narrative of Apartment 16 is cleanly divided between these two characters. Largely without exception, you get a chapter in the company of each, and though their respective paths don't cross until surprisingly late in the game, their neatly competing perspectives play off one other well. In one, you learn of a problematic flat covered in creepy paintings; in the other, you hear about an infamous Satanic artist who vanished decades ago. That it takes so long for Seth to meet Apryl creates a tension in the narrative that's almost unbearable.

Indeed, reading Apartment 16 is a tense and uncomfortable experience for the duration - and at nearly 500 pages, Nevill's second novel is by horror standards fairly substantial. But for all its length, the narrative flies by. The pacing isn't perfect - a few relatively pointless diversions early in the second act don't do much to add to Apartment 16's primary thrust - but the author evokes the dank and desperately unpleasant atmosphere of Barrington House so effectively that you'll be whipping through chapters just to see the back of the place.

The supernatural goings-on in and around the luxury apartment block are one thing - one creeping, dreadful thing, at that - but perhaps the book's most memorable moment has nothing whatsoever to do with hauntings or monsters or anything along those lines. In a pivotal, all-or-nothing moment, Seth is attacked by a trio of vicious young thugs on the streets of London; thugs who don't seem to want to mug him so much as indulge in a random act of horrifying violence. It's a truly terrible sequence, blunt and brutal, that sets the misbegotten nightwatchman off down a road from which there's no return, as well as marking Apartment 16's descent into darkness.

Seth and Apryl's last visit to the titular apartment isn't pretty, you can be sure of that much, and though the narrative ends on an appropriately bleak note, Neville rather dulls the impact of his novel's climactic last throes by ushering a rush of revelation from a sudden new narrator (to say any more about whom would be to give the game away). That aside, there's a great deal to appreciate in Apartment 16, not least a terrific sense of tension, an antagonist wrought from the stuff of nightmares and no short supply of moments of utter, open-mouthed terror and discomfort.

And isn't that what horror novels are all about?

Whatever you do, don't read Apartment 16 before you turn out the lights and head for bed. But do read it.
***

Apartment 16
by Adam Nevill
May 2010, Pan

Buy this book from
Amazon.co.uk / Amazon.com /
IndieBound / The Book Depository

Recommended and Related Reading