THE HAUNTED MAZE by
Theo Fenraven
Date:
01/11/2014
Grade:
4.5
Details:
Novella
Own
/ Kindle
The
burb:
“Still in his twenties, Percy Callendar is one
of the richest men in the world. In an attempt to find the future love of his
life—and because he likes to have fun—he builds the ultimate haunted house and
assembles a select group of men to go through it.
Sage Donovan, owner of a fledgling IT company, is the seventh applicant to receive an invitation. He figures completing the maze—something no one has done yet—will guarantee fame and maybe fortune, and he immediately accepts despite having a little problem with anxiety.
Witches, spiders, ghosts and ghouls are the least Sage has to deal with, because before the night is over, he will face his deepest fear, changing his life and Percy’s forever.”
Sage Donovan, owner of a fledgling IT company, is the seventh applicant to receive an invitation. He figures completing the maze—something no one has done yet—will guarantee fame and maybe fortune, and he immediately accepts despite having a little problem with anxiety.
Witches, spiders, ghosts and ghouls are the least Sage has to deal with, because before the night is over, he will face his deepest fear, changing his life and Percy’s forever.”
My
thoughts:
They
say good things are worth waiting for. I’m not the most patient of creatures
and waiting for Amazon to get their act together and release ‘The
Haunted Maze’ was very frustrating, but...I have to admit it, well worth
the wait in the end. Talk about building anticipation...
Theo
Fenraven amazes me. Every time I start one of his books I find myself diving
into something completely new. This author doesn’t repeat himself, he flirts
with genres and then moves on to the next one, always flexing his artistic
muscles and pushing himself and the reader to extend their boundaries. Of course
the amazing aspect of this flexing is not so much that he does it, but that he
not only gets away with it but manages to own each of the genres he tackles as
well as put his personal spin on it.
It’s
hard not to fall for Sage. He’s presented as an honest, good and reliable young
man who wants to do and be the best he can be. His perseverance when faced with
his deepest fear was described so well I almost experienced his anxiety as well
as his determination to overcome it.
I
wasn’t entirely sure what to think or make of Percy. His scheme is, of course,
utter madness and yet there is something sweet and almost innocent about his
hope and belief he might find a man who will love him in the middle of a
haunted house.
The
same is true for Richard, Percy’s lawyer and friend. I couldn’t quite pinpoint
him. Like Percy he sounds impersonal and ‘big business’ a lot of the time. And
yet there are these gestures and casual remarks suggesting both men might be
basically good. This of course makes the characters more interesting and
realistic. While having a clear cut distinction between sympathetic and
despicable characters can make a story easy to read, it rarely makes a book or
the characters in it fascinating. And if Percy and his haunted house are to be
described as anything, fascinating would be the word to use.
Once
Sage enters the Maze the story blew me away. The various scenes, the different
kinds of horror and the puzzles he has to solve were all cleverly thought out
and presented so well it was possible to visualize the creatures and monsters. Sage’s
internal conflicts as a result of rationally knowing everything he sees and
experiences is fake and the very real fear he experiences regardless, was
recognisable and made him all the more realistic. His internal dialogue as well
as the comments he makes to Percy, who he knows is observing him, added a
wonderful touch of humour to the story and put a smile on my face on more than
one occasion.
I
loved how Theo Fenraven managed to portray a burgeoning relationship between
two characters who spend most of their time apart from each other. Initially
the only interaction between Percy and Sage takes place without face to face
contact, through short conversations over the intercom. And yet, despite the
lack of direct contact the reader is in no doubt these two men are getting to
know and appreciate each other more with each new horror Sage faces.
I
really don’t want to say anything else about the story. Exactly what
imaginative horrors Sage runs into and how he deals with them should be a surprise
to the reader. The same is true for what happens when Percy’s carefully laid
plans are thrown into turmoil. Reading this book is very close to visiting a haunted
house. The reader, like Sage, has no idea what to expect next. Each turn of the
page may bring a new surprise or shock, just like turning each corner in a
haunted house would bring you face to face with something else to make you
startle and scream. Very well done, Mr. Fenraven.
The
Haunted Maze, despite its title, is a love story, be it that we only get to see
the very early stages of the romance. In most books that would result in me
wishing the story had been longer. The Haunted Maze didn’t leave me
feeling disappointed though. By the time the story ended I’d seen enough of Sage
and Percy to believe it was possible for them to be something special together.
This was one book in which how they got to that point was far more interesting
than what might happen afterwards could ever be.
As
always – and I do seem to reflect on this in every review of books by this
author - the writing in The Haunted Maze is breathtaking and
awe-inspiring. I’ll never understand how Theo Fenraven manages to create such
vivid pictures with so few, yet very carefully chosen, words. Reading his books
is pure reading delight for me and I can’t wait to see what he’ll be coming up
with next.
Buy link for The Haunted Maze on
Amazon: http://smile.amazon.com/Haunted-Maze-Theo-Fenraven-ebook/dp/B00P47DVJQ/ref=sr_1_8?ie=UTF8&qid=1414928030&sr=8-8&keywords=The+Haunted+Maze
Thanks for a wonderful review! :)
ReplyDeleteAs always, entirely my pleasure. Boy, you know how to write them :)
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