Wednesday, February 21, 2018

What I Read: Dark Places

The Facebook book club I mentioned in my last review also organizes a yearly book swap around New Year's. My book swap partner in 2016 (going into 2017) was incredibly gracious and sent me not one but two books! One was Both Flesh and Not, which they sent based on the prodigious amounts of David Foster Wallace in my GoodReads, and one book they had really enjoyed during the year: Gillian Flynn's Dark Places. I tore into Both Flesh and Not right away, but kept on putting off Dark Places. I don't normally read thrillers (though I love mysteries, so go figure) and everything I knew about Gone Girl was so unappealing that I was afraid Dark Places would be more of the same.

It's not, at least not entirely (false accusations of sexual misconduct are still a major plot point, things that make you go "Hmmmmmmmmmmmmm"), but if I've understood the chatter around Gone Girl correctly, there's still equivalent gore and gruesomeness. Be prepared for some unflinching descriptions of a triple homicide and some serious violence done to cattle.

I put off reading Dark Places for so long that it became eligible for my 101 in 1001 goal of "read one book that you've owned for over a year but never read," and so in the absence of anything else left on that list (which also included Journal of a SolitudeGösta Berling's Saga, and Bödeln, among others), I finally picked it up on New Year's and finished it within a few days.

The cover of "Dark Places" by Gillian Flynn. The title is in a lime green sans-serif font on a black back background, with a photo negative image of weeds in the bottom left corner.
Image courtesy Phoenix
 Ultimately, I'm glad that I finally got around to reading Dark Places. I'm still not much of a thriller fan, but there's a neat symmetry to the way that Flynn builds the story as it alternates between present-day and the day of the murder. It's worth reading just for the structure alone, to see the way things are set up and subverted, to see how clues are revealed, to see how even small things turn up again in the end when you least expect them, to see how people can interpret the same events or scenes or scrap of evidence completely differently (sometimes tragically so). Dark Places is an excellent book to dissect if you're writing your own story in a similar genre.

No comments:

Post a Comment