A review by arosereads
The Southern Book Club's Guide to Slaying Vampires by Grady Hendrix

dark tense slow-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? No
  • Loveable characters? No
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

2.0

This book had potential and completely fell flat. The author tried to make social commentary about race, class, and gender, and the parallel between vampirism and gentrification was promising, but it completely fell flat. While the author was trying to make commentary about misogyny, ultimately the female characters are two dimensional stereotypical personalities rooted in misogyny rather than fully fleshed out characters with development. For a novel that centers the pain of a Black community, it is very much glossed over and ultimately there is only 1 recurring Black character (Mrs. Greene) who doesn’t even get a first name until 2/3 of the way through the book. She is also constantly cleaning up after the white protagonists and doesn’t get centered in the narrative enough.

There are other aspects that made me very uncomfortable too, not limited to the multiple graphic depictions of sexual assault (one of which is a minor), the casual fatphobia/body shaming, the obsession that the son has with N*zis which is never dealt with and only used to show Patricia is a “bad mom” (?????), the trivialization of suicide and mental illness (the symptoms of the “sickness” the kids get seems to parallel addiction and the subject matter isn’t approached with the sensitivity it deserves), and then the demonization of mental health professionals (Carter is HORRIBLE and uses his psychology expertise to manipulate his family and Patricia pulls her daughter from the mental hospital and the novel makes a point of saying it’s against doctors orders etc), and domestic violence is brought up and glossed over and ultimately the butt of a weird joke? Overall, there are a lot of complex and delicate topics covered in this book, and none of them are really done well or appropriately.

I only gave 2 stars because while the pacing was slow, I did really like the author’s descriptions in the horror scenes. The part in the attic was very visceral and gave me chills and the gory scene at the end was well written and descriptive. It’s clear that Grady Hendrix should stick to icky horror stuff and leave the social commentary to those who are more well equipped to handle it properly.

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