Monday, September 17, 2007

Lost Boys


I read Lost Boys for the R.I.P. II Challenge, the Cardathon Challenge which I'm hosting, and the Read the Author Challenge. I had avoided it for years quite honestly because it is not really my kind of book. The premise is simple, what if a boy's "imaginary" friends weren't imaginary. What if they were ghosts. What if a boy's changed behavior wasn't the result of a cross-country move, what if their new house was the burial ground for kidnapped and murdered children. What if he was the only one who could see them, hear them, talk with them. What if no one believed your story. Meet Stevie. A young boy--seven and eight--who is the 'sensitive' one in his family. Thought to be odd by his classmates, Steve's insight isn't as imaginary as folks think. The oldest child--with two younger siblings and another on the way--the year of 1983 is a living nightmare. His father, devastated by the economic recession gets a job as a writer of computer manuals. He was a game programmer. A rather successful one. The mother is lost in taking care of her children and busying herself with church work. Neither is quite aware of the dangers that await them in this small town in North Carolina.

It's an uncomfortable read that never gets any easier. Why? It paints the horrors of humanity--the depravity of man--in a thoroughly realistic and haunting way. Though there is 'one' main threat, the sickness and cruelty of the human race surround this family. The coworker who is a bit too insistent on babysitting. The teacher whose cruelty is just unspeakable. The neighbor who is quite possibly certifiably crazy yet off his medication. And then there is the serial killer/child molester. This seemingly "normal" and "safe" neighborhood is anything but. And that is what makes Lost Boys so scary. The fact that even though these are cautious parents who want only the best for their children, in some ways they are helpless to protect them. It is what you don't know that may come back to haunt you when all is said and done.

5 comments:

Stephanie said...

OK. This actually sounds like it will be right up my alley!! And it's already on my Cardathon reading list!!

Great review!

Anonymous said...

Sounds like quite the commentary on modern life.

Anonymous said...

Sounds very creepy! What genre does Card fall into? Would this be considered horror or sci-fi? I'm curious because I've never read anything by him before and I'm really intrigued by your description of the book.

Becky said...

Verbivore,

Card has written three books, Lost Boys among them, that would be "horror." He does write a lot of science fiction though. But this isn't one of them :)

Karlene said...

I usually don't read horror, but I love Orson Scott Card. I read this one several years ago and it has stuck with me. It really is quite creepy, but very touching. One of the few horror stories that I'd be willing to recommend to others.