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A TWISTED LADDER
Rhodi Hawk
Forge
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Each unhappy
family, observed Leo Tolstoy, is unhappy in its own way -- and none of
his characters had to contend with demons, extra-sensory mind control
and voodoo priestesses with grudges. Madeleine LeBlanc, the
psychologist heroine of A Twisted Ladder, on the other hand, is juggling
all three, along with an apparently schizophrenic father, a brother who
commits suicide early in the novel, and a great-grandmother seemingly
hell-bent on setting her up with the mysterious Zenon Lansky, a gun-shop
owner with telepathic tendencies and a penchant for recreational
homicide. Never mind that Madeleine's also developing concerns
about her own psychological state, since the arrival of a mysterious
young girl named Severin, whom apparently only Madeleine can see or
hear...
This Southern Gothic family saga, Rhodi Hawk's first
novel, is an intense and brilliant psychological thriller with
supernatural elements. The plot is tight and fast-paced (a fine
and good thing considering the book is more than 500-pages long), and
Hawk's characters are original and compelling -- often chilling, too.
She sustains the tension well, handling the ambiguity of Madeleine's
mental state with skill and sympathy, without ever sinking into the
irritating trap of depicting psychological instability by confusing the
hell out of her reader. Additionally, her setting is as much a
character in the book as its cast of assorted phantoms, addicts, and
plantation owners; the heat and damp of the Louisiana bayou infuses
every page until it's surprising the damn thing hasn't turned into a
soggy, steaming mess in your hands.
Mostly light on gore but heavy on the atmosphere, A
Twisted Ladder is deeply unsettling in its depiction of a tortured
family history that continues to impinge upon the present. As
Madeleine struggles to move beyond the darkness that imbues her family's
past, she is drawn into an increasingly tangled web of deceit, violence
and black magic. However, it is the relationships in this novel
that give the book its true power, proving that, although each family
may differ in its own way, it is the common thread of our humanity that
ultimately unites us.
JUSTINE
WARWICK |