A look into a disturbed child's mind -- 4-1/2 stars
"Blue Rose" takes a look into a very dysfunctional family, with the
focus on the two youngest of five brothers: Harry and "Little Eddie."
In the Beever family, everyone seems to abuse everyone else: The
shrewish mother berates the father; the three eldest boys abuse the
youngers and each other; the two oldest have left and joined the
military, but the middle child, Albert, is still around to dish out
physical and verbal abuse.
But even Albert spends most of his time at the local mechanic garage, so that leaves Little Eddie to Harry's tender mercies.
As the story opens, Harry is terrorizing Little Eddie with stories of
his next year's school teacher having "killed" a former student; Eddie
has problems with fear, and Harry plays into this until Eddie hands over
his recent birthday present, a toy car. Which Harry proceeds to
destroy and discard.
But the real plot gets rolling when Harry finds a book on hypnotism in the attic where the two boys play.
The passages that followed reminded me somewhat of "Pandora's Game," a
book I highly recommend. But in "Pandora's Game," the protagonists use
hypnosis to explore their inner creativity (before things go awry). In
"Blue Rose," Harry uses it to explore his inner sadism on his brother.
I won't give away the details of Harry's experiments, as "Blu Rose" is a
novella that runs just 87 pages in my edition. But I will say that
they escalate out of control in very short order, leaving this reader
feeling sorry for Little Eddie in a way that lingered even after the
story was over.
And Straub does an excellent job of examining the experiments' fall out
as it affects the whole Beever family. He crafts an uncomfortable yet
compelling yarn that kept me turning the pages, like watching an
accident that just won't let you look away.
The only reason I am not giving "Blue Rose" the full 5 stars is that the
ending just ... happens. Time jumps, and the final chapter is told in
the form of a letter from Harry to his girlfriend. That letter touches
on some of the elements of the main story, describes some of the
consequences, but only as a sort of aside. Otherwise, this reader was left thinking, "Well ... I
guess it's over."
But overall, "Blue Rose" is a compelling, quick read. I recommend it for a 1 to 2 day experience.
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