Harleigh Beck, Come Out, Come Out, Wherever You Are: an Erotic Horror Story
It’s been nearly a year since Skyler and Evelyn killed their high school’s star quarterback, Nate, in a totally avoidable hit-and-run accident. They’ve kept their culpability secret for an entire year, despite the rumor-mongering common in small towns. But as the anniversary approaches, Skyler begins seeing Nate everywhere. She fears his spirit hungers for revenge, until he astounds her by showing up, alive and unmarked, in the high school hallway.To review this novel, I must first acknowledge: I’m not Harleigh Beck’s intended audience. Before page one, Beck dedicates this novel “For all of my erotic horror girlies.” Not women, girlies. Beck has selected a mostly young, primarily female audience, presumably one whose ability to appreciate literature is uncluttered by excessive prior reading. Perhaps that’s why Beck pinches liberally from Tobe Hooper, Ambrose Bierce, Kevin Williamson, and more.
The seemingly resurrected Nate wants revenge on Skyler specifically. And the revenge he wants is specifically sexual in nature. Though Skyler, who narrates most of this novel in first person, repeatedly emphasizes her plainness and lack of desirability, she has constant attention from several boys—a staple of young adult fiction. But while Dustin and Max want to date Skyler, Nate wants to humiliate, degrade, and dominate her.
And Skyler loves it.
Although these characters are high school students, and several important scenes happen inside their school, Skyler and Nate occupy a world substantially devoid of adults, surnames, and other indicators. Only in the epilogue do any adults (besides Skyler’s mostly absent, milquetoast dad) appear, or any characters receive surnames. Group dynamics mimic teen movies from the 1990s and 2000s. Characters, individually or together, are beholden to Hollywood boilerplates.
Only in Nate’s tortures of Skyler do events vary from cinematic standards. By day, Nate finds ways to isolate and gaslight Skyler. By night, he seeks increasingly embarrassing ways to sexually torment her, promising to eventually deflower and assassinate her. His conflation of sex and death would trigger Sigmund Freud’s alarm bells, not only for his dominant power trip, but also the increasing gratification Skyler feels at her forced submission.
Beck divides the novel into two parts. (Three actually, but the third is a brief codicil.) Part One mimics conventional teen horror. Nate tortures Skyler in broad daylight, blackmailing her into complicity by threatening to reveal what happened that fateful night. Nate’s malevolent predations exist amid a context of teenage ennui: high school, where everybody fits pre-written social roles, and Skyler’s home life, where Dad has become a phantom.
Harleigh Beck |
Previous reviewers have raved about Beck’s “twist ending,” which has become an obligatory component of genre fiction today. This further demonstrates that Beck writes for an audience unclouded by excessive genre familiarity, because without spoilers, she signposts the twist from around page 20. Besides, it’ll take serious gumption to write twists exceeding Catriona Ward, so maybe authors should pause that boilerplate for now.
And the erotic component? Beck highlights that component in her promotional material, and considers herself so transgressive that she requires a full-page trigger warning in the front matter. So does the content stir my loins? No, but I’m not seventeen, like these characters. They seemingly find eros in describing body parts and saying dirty words. They’re clearly finding their sexuality, and as students, reduce the experience to limbs and anatomy.
I find myself neither frightened, nor aroused, nor invested in character development, as characters develop according to their designated Hollywood roles. But again, I’m not Beck’s preferred audience: I’m a middle-aged male who’s watched horror movies for thirty years. Beck writes for a more naive audience unjaded by either sex or death. Perhaps it matters that Skyler repeatedly protests her Laurie Strode-like innocence.
Perhaps Beck would rather write big-ticket film treatments. Perhaps this story might make stirring, acceptably dangerous late-night Netflix viewing. But just reading it, where I set my own pace, I’m too conscious of Beck’s cinematic sources and shopworn cliches. Beck has an earnest, skillful voice and handles English well, so I finished the novel easily. But without either eros or thanos, I close the book and think: “Meh.”
No comments:
Post a Comment