Review - The Darkness Giger, Texas - 5 Stars
A total scarefest! Definitely not for the squeamish. This takes place right before a hurricane is about to hit. Those of us who have dealt with a hurricane or are afraid of the dark, will experience real terror among these pages. Michael Warren and his friends have no idea why there are mass murders taking place at night, not just in Giger, Texas, but all over the world. You won't believe what they encounter. Many of you may want to sleep with the lights on after this.
We have a very plausible scenario here that switches to the viewpoint of thecharacters throughout. If you live in the Houston area, you can really visualize this taking place which makes it all the more terrifying. I wasn't sure what to expect when I started this, but it was worth the ride. Seasoned horror fans will be glued to their seats as a new terror takes shape. - Reviewed by Janet
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Let’s explore a
little about what scares you. I’ve read
books and watched movies that reflect things that scare us. Sometimes it is waking up and suddenly realizing
that you are the last person on earth, i.e. Loneliness. According to psychiatrists, we need people
for everything from simple companionship to feeling good about ourselves. This notion was examined time and again on
the TV series The Twilight Zone. In Where is Everybody?, our main character
basically wakes up in a town alone. He
tries a pay phone. Nothing. He rushes from a restaurant to the sheriff’’s
office, finding no one. He has a moment
of hope when he sees a woman sitting in a car.
Further investigating, however, reveals that it is a mannequin. When he can find no hope, ultimately our
protagonist starts to crack up.
We also see it in Time Enough when the main character
survives a nuclear war. Upon surfacing, the
man finds everything has been destroyed.
He is a ferocious reader who wears thick eyeglasses. However, after discovering
piles and piles of books he now has all the time in the world to read, he sees
another on the ground, bends to retrieve it, and his glasses slide off of his
nose and break. Now he is alone, unable
to read, with no one to talk to and nothing to do but wait to die.
In a more recent
film, Passengers, the main character
is on a spaceship, heading to a new world with thousands of other passengers. By accident, the main character accidentally awakens. All of the others still sleep. Doing almost everything he wants to, from
dancing in a virtual club to space walking outside of the ship, he finds it
isn’t enough. He needs a companion and
soon finds it paramount.
So we need other people
and fear total solitude. What else scares us?
Let’s consider some childhood that sometimes follow us into adulthood. The three I’ve heard mentioned the most often
are the monsters under the bed, the boogeyman in the closet and what lurks in
the darkness. As adults, the darkness
continues to frighten us because we are aware now of terrors—like serial
killers—that may lay in waiting for us as we walk to our cars late at night.
Sick individuals who aren’t out steal our money or carjack us, but just want to
see us suffer and die. Or the lone
gunman who unexpectedly sprays crowds with bullets or the man who waits in the
shadows, engine running, carefully timing a hit and run. All for the sake of violence. But what happens when the menace in the darkness
waiting to kill you isn’t a person, but the darkness itself is?
“So what?” some
might respond. “The darkness is intangible.” But what if it became tangible, not just her or there, but everywhere shadows
formed. And the one thing we knew for
certain was that the sun must set.
Again, so might
shrug and say, “So what? I’ll simply
turn on the lights.” What if a hurricane
then plowed ashore and took away your light source? What if the darkness grew so thick that is
blocked out the starts from the sky… and the light in your house? How would you protect yourself if a candle or
flashlight simply wasn’t enough light to stave off the darkness? Would submersing yourself in such a tale take
you back to an earlier time in your life when the monster under the bed and the
boogeyman in the closet seemed terrifyingly real?
Well, this is what
I present to you, dear reader: A villain
you cannot speak with, interview, reason with or evade… ever!
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