A Fig for All the Devils

Paperback, 261 pages

Published Oct. 31, 2021 by Albatross Book Co..

ISBN:
9798985034608
ASIN:
B09HSX6M4H
3 stars (2 reviews)

An abused, grief-stricken, and impoverished Sonny has all but given up on life. That is, until he meets death, by way of the Grim Reaper. The Reaper, a junk food loving, poetry reading, cigarette-addicted entity, has no time to waste as he searches for a suitable successor who would become "Death" for the next millennium. By training the boy in the ways of death and dying, Reaper grooms his young apprentice and through suspenseful and horror-laced events, he unknowingly gives Sonny something he never intended: Something to live for.

1 edition

Liked what it attempted to do, but don't feel it actually succeeded in doing it well.

2 stars

I feel like this book failed to actually hit the notes it was attempting to hit. It wanted to work through abuse, death, and grief but really felt like it was forcing the wrong characters to learn lessons when they were meant to be the narrative devices through which the protagonist Sonny (and his family) were meant to learn.

Much of the exploration felt incredibly superficial, with Sonny just moving on through processing the abuses he endured. This isn't to say that there's one right way to process and deal with abuse, but there was nothing that actually made Sonny engage with what he experienced. In a good chunk of the novel, it was very much "tell don't show" or "show but gloss over."

Overall, it's an interesting attempt, but I left it feeling very unsatisfied. I was even left frustrated by the ending, which I think should've had consequences …

Liked what this book attempted to do, but don't feel it actually succeeded in doing it well.

3 stars

The book is structured kind of like a horror novel, though it doesn't really give that feeling as you progress through the narrative.

Using the Grim Reaper, it tries to explore concepts surrounding abuse, death, and grief. The protagonist, Sonny, is a teenage boy who is given an opportunity to replace Death, becoming him in his stead and allowing him to finally rest after thousands of years. In becoming Death, he has to find ways to work through a lot of earthly emotions and those things that tie him to the world.

As I've said, I like this concept. But I don't think the author managed to explore any of those concepts, often skipping over them or seemingly using them in superficial ways. It feels a bit forced how often Sonny moves on or deals with his issues, even toward the end where he seemingly learns a lot about himself …