Harrison Squared is fun little tale from author Daryl Gregory, who is able to vacillate easily between adult horror/supernatural (and offbeat family dynamics in Spoonbenders) tales rooted in early horror writers, to this YA title that carries some of the same themes, but presented in a less frightening way. Still, it’s basically Lovecraft’s Cthulhu meets a modern-day Scooby gang. Harrison is deft sixteen year-old, who must deal with the town of Dunnsworth, its often creepy adults (and sometime creepy kids), and the kidnapping of his mother.
Gregory has an affinity for witty dialogue and it shines
here, as he creates some wonderfully fun characters (I enjoyed Aunt Selena a
lot). And while this book (which does hint at further adventures to come) is
not that original –I mean, clearly Daryl Gregory took all his teenage passions
and dumped them into this book- he is able to keep the balance between horror, humor
and things we’ve seen before going through to the end.
I also discovered after finishing this book that Harrison was featured in a previous short novel (or novella, I guess) released a year before Harrison Squared. We Are All Completely Fine is about physiologist Dr. Jan Sayer, who gathers survivors of supernatural violence. One of those people it turns out to be Harrison, who is in his mid-thirties and spends most of his time popping pills and not sleeping. He apparently was, at one time, a monster hunter.
I’ll need to track this one down to see how much backstory is revealed about Harrison. While it shouldn’t bother me, knowing that Harrison is alive twenty-years after this book, it means that if Daryl Gregory continues from this book, any danger he puts Harrison in is lessened by the fact he is alive at 35.
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