Book Review: Black

Black
by Ted Dekker

My rating: 4.5 / 5
Genre: Christian fantasy thriller

After an encounter with a dangerous loan shark, Thomas Hunter dreams of a world where evil is completely contained and humans live in happiness and harmony. The dream is so vivid that while he’s dreaming, he’s certain the world with the loan shark is the dream. Then the worlds begin to bleed together when he learns about some events that are still future to the “Earth” side and are expected to wipe out most of life on Earth. Knowledge from each world becomes useful in the other, and before long, both worlds are in jeopardy.

I read this book, and the entire trilogy, for the first time back around when it came out. I remember finding it a bit strange, confusing, and not particularly enjoyable. My husband read the series more recently and said he thought I’d like it…so I gave it another chance. I have come to understand that, when I was a young adult, I read this book as a direct parallel to Christianity. Though it certainly has an analogous angle to it, I needed to read it more as fantasy and let it be what it was, not what I assumed it should be. Doing that made this second reading experience far better than the first. I was hooked early on, enjoying the fast pace of the “Earth” reality and the world building of the “green forest” reality alongside it. Though the green forest side was slow in comparison to the Earth side, I skimmed a few scenes when Thomas had a very real, yet at the same time kind of abstract, communion with Elyon, the undisputed Creator of the green forest reality. I get the inclusion of those scenes, but I didn’t feel the need to read them thoroughly.

As the Earth reality gained speed toward the pending disaster, the green forest takes a turn that is sad and unexpected (though, at the same time, unsurprising), and I was really curious to see where that side of the story was going to go next. I remember snippets from the trilogy, but fortunately, it’s mostly all new. The last few pages are a bit bizarre but, at the same time, intriguing. And the book ends on a cliffhanger, which I normally dislike, but it really worked here. And now I’m excited to continue reading, which I didn’t expect to be!

I am aware that I’m at the beginning of a long, twisty mess of a book franchise. Some are directly connected and others are more peripherally so, and apparently there’s no specified order in which to read the books. I have read one of those books in the past and part of another one, and I found both bizarre and unsettling, coincidentally enough. I currently don’t have a lot of desire to read much more than the main trilogy, but I’ll see how I feel when I’m done with the first 3 books, and maybe the prequel.

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Book Review: Monster

Monster
by Frank Peretti

My rating: 4 / 5
Genre: Christian thriller

When Reed Shelton’s wife Beck disappears at the start of a survival weekend, many people from the nearby area band together to try to track her in the wilderness. But strange things are happening in the woods, and soon Beck isn’t the only victim. Finding her alive becomes more and more uncertain, and the monster in the woods may not be what anyone thinks.

This book took multiple turns from what I expected, starting with actually following Beck during much of her disappearance. As Reed and Beck’s friends try to get to the truth of what is going on in the woods, there are various twists and suspenseful moments. Just what I expect from a Peretti novel, right down to the search for truth. My only real issue is how Reed treats his wife. She has some fairly severe anxieties, and he wants to get her out of the house and into the woods, thinking it will help her, and he may be right, but he’s pretty pushy and not always very nice.

I put off reading this novel for a long time, even though Peretti has been my favorite author for years. Maybe it was because I didn’t think anything could live up to The Oath, my favorite Peretti novel, or maybe it was because my husband’s super-brief summary of the book made it sound uninteresting. It didn’t unseat my favorites, but I should have trusted my favorite author and read this book a long time ago. Though the main characters in the book are Christian and Peretti definitely questions evolution in this novel, it’s not preachy at all. If you enjoy thriller novels with a little bit of science involved, you might consider giving this one a try.

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