As avid
readers, do you have any favorite authors? We could call them “Comfort
Authors,” sort of like comfort foods. When you’ve had a long day, or long week,
and you just need a break and a different world to escape to, what’s one of the
first authors you reach for?
Hopefully, as
Horror readers you won’t think I’m crazy when I answer Ted Dekker.
(Trust me,
there are plenty of other reasons to think I’m crazy.)
Book after
book, the more I lean towards his shelves at the bookstore. The more I read,
the faster my fingers type his name in the search bar of Amazon.com.
Don’t worry,
the obsession hasn’t reached a creepy status, it’s just that I’m a lover of
good writing and a thrilling story. The next book I’ve chosen to review by
Dekker is an older one…well older as in 2008. I remember reading this book a
few years ago. My family and I were on our way to Washington D.C. for a weekend
vacation. I believe I started it either the day before we left, or the day of.
What did I do
in the airport? Read Adam.
What did I do
on the plane? Read Adam.
What did I do
in D.C.? Read Adam.
What did I do
on the plane ride home? Finished reading Adam.
I couldn’t
have put it down even if I had wanted to. Even the design, the way it feels,
it’s just addicting.
Adam is about a Special Agent named Daniel Clark. He’s an obsessive agent
who searches after serial killers. Clark claims that his obsessive behavior
helps get him in the mindset of the killers. Simultaneously, however, it also
causes his divorce with his wife Heather. Clark is a talented agent, but of
course, Dekker has created a killer who seems to be just that much better. The
killer, known as Eve, has taken the lives a 16 women and is still on the move.
Now, this is
beginning to sound like every other serial killer story, isn’t it?
Would I have
named Dekker as a “Comfort Author” if ordinary and typical was all he gave us?
Adam does contain the classic serial killer concept, however, combined with
Dekker’s ability to confuse, entertain, surprise, and amaze his readers, it’s
brought up to a whole new level. The graphics for one thing. If you like being
scared, but can’t necessarily take a graphic, semi-gory mental image, this may
be a book to weary away from. HOWEVER, the detailed illustrations just add an
absolutely needed layer of the story. While it’s not everyone’s favorite
aspect, the images Dekker uses are not thrown around willy-nilly.
These
descriptions are thoughtfully placed to not disgust the reader, but to enhance
the story.
That is just
what they do.
So for those
of you with hearts for horror and queasy stomachs, I think you’ll be able to
handle this one.
Another layer
worth mentioning is how Dekker uses Christian beliefs in this story. The
references made are blunt and easy to catch. Yet, the meaning he implies is not
so clear. The words Adam and Eve give most people a solid idea of the story. In
Adam, the reason Dekker uses them isn’t as easy to grasp at first as we
would think.
Since I’m discussing
the above-ordinary writing in Adam, the backstory for the killer is also
done in an appreciative manner.
The killer is
the first character we’re introduced to. Through newspaper clippings we are
given the killer, his name, and what has gotten him to the mental state he
possesses. Personally, I love when authors can let me know who the killer is
and then are still able to create enough mystery to keep me reading.
Adam is truly one book that I will
continue to marvel at, even as my list of “Comfort Authors” grows.
I haven't read this book by Ted Dekker. Sounds interesting. And yes, he is an amazing writer. I argued with him after I finished Thr3e. Of course he couldn't hear me. I went back through the book to find proof I was right and that he had made a mistake somewhere. Well, he won the argument. So maybe Adam will be a good read this summer. Thanks for the heads up Hannah!
ReplyDeleteI actually haven't read Three yet...However, your comment intrigues me. It's on the shelf, I'll definitely have to pick it up soon.
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