Showing posts with label D.W. Gillespie. Show all posts
Showing posts with label D.W. Gillespie. Show all posts

Friday, August 16, 2024

Give Me Something Good To Eat by D.W. Gillespie

Title: Give Me Something Good to Eat
Series: n/a 
Author: D.W. Gillespie
Source/Format: NetGalley; eARC
More Details: Middle Grade; Horror
Publisher/Publication Date: Delacorte Press; August 13, 2024

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Synopsis from Goodreads...
Perfect for fans of Hocus Pocus and Stranger Things, this middle grade debut tells the story of a boy who travels into an alternate version of his Halloween-obsessed town to save his sister from an evil witch and free the town from the witch’s curse. 
Fear comes home.Welcome to Pearl, a town obsessed with the spooky decorations, the costumes, the candy. No one seems to notice that every October 31st, a kid goes missing. Mason Miller does, though. Somehow he’s the only one who has any memory the person existed at all.When Mason’s sister, Meg, vanishes while they’re trick-or-treating, Mason and his friends are pulled into an underworld where monsters roam the streets. They need to fight the evil taking over Pearl, but none of them know the true danger they're facing.Meg has been stolen by a witch who has no plans to let her go. Shadows of death curl around trees and behind doorways as Mason must use every ounce of bravery he has . . . or be haunted forever with the memory of a sister that only he remembers.

Living in a town like Pearl, which is obsessed with Halloween, seems like it should be fun, at least in theory anyway. Well, that gets put into frightening perspective in D.W. Gillespie’s new middle grade horror novel, Give Me Something Good to Eat. Billed as perfect for fans of Stranger Things and Hocus Pocus, the story is a magical and nightmarish foray into spells, monsters, and what is functionally a curse lurking under the veneer of what should be all fun and games.

Mason Miller has something better and more important to do than take his little sister, Meg, trick-or-treating. Kids are going missing, and he’s one of the few who remembers. So he enlists the help of his closest friend, Serge. And Meg just wants her brother to go back to how he used to be. Most of the character motivations were simple. Mason wants to be the hero of the story, but his drive to solve the mystery is also far more personal. Serge wants to help out his best friend, while juggling Halloween night and a crush. Meg just wants to have fun and is annoyed when the night isn’t turning out how she wanted. It set up a tense dynamic, which offered an opening to the villains of story. It was, effectively, all about cause and effect, despite the good intentions of the character’s involved—they were just kids, and mistakes were bound to happen.

The Stranger Things and Hocus Pocus comparison is apt. The story, very early on, felt like an echo to the start of the film, while the TV show’s comparison won’t make much sense until after the story takes off, and Meg winds up being the next kid to vanish on Halloween night. That in itself provided one of the more intense sequence of scenes in the novel, where the anxiety, fear, and frustration was almost palpable—but it was only the start. The pop culture references aren’t what make the story. Instead its Gillespine’s spin on the monster genre and creative usage of spells and magic—as well as how intrinsically it was linked to the underlying horror, tension, and stakes of Give Me Something Good to Eat—that does.

Give Me Something Good to Eat is another good foray into middle grade horror, and I would recommend it to those who have enjoyed books like It Came From the Trees by Ally Russell and Bumps in the Night by Amalie Howard.
 
About the author....
A long time fan of all things dark and spooky, D.W. Gillespie began writing monstrous stories while still in grade school. At one point, his mother asked the doctor if there was anything she should be concerned about, and he assured her that some kids just like stories about decapitations. He's been writing on and off for over a decade, quietly building a body of work that includes horror and dark sci-fi. His novels include Still Dark, The Toy Thief, and a short story collection titled Handmade Monsters. He lives in Tennessee with his wife and two kids, all three of which give him an endless supply of things to write about

Disclaimer: this copy of the book was provided by the publisher (Delacorte Press) via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review, thank you! 
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