Wednesday, 16 March 2022

The Deadly Grimoire: An Arkham Horror Novel by Rosemary Jones - Book Review

 


'A daring actress and a barnstorming pilot team up to save the world from supernatural disaster in this uncanny pulp adventure set in the world of Arkham Horror

'Betsy Baxter is the plucky stunt-actor star of the 1920s serial adventure, The Flapper Detective. While researching a wing-walking scene, she meets the fearless Winifred Habbamock and discovers a shared background of eerie encounters and eldritch phenomena. For years, Betsy has been investigating the disappearance of an old friend during the horror-struck filming of The Mask of Silver, when she learns of his reappearance in Arkham, she and Winifred hit the road to investigate. But Arkham is full of mysteries and danger. Betsy will need all her skills, and new allies, to prevent an otherworldly cataclysm from consuming her and all of Arkham.'

The Deadly Grimoire is the latest entry in the Arkham Horror series from Aconyte Books, and follows up from last years Mask of Silver

The story begins by introducing us to Betsy Baxter, the Hollywood star of the popular Flapper Detective series of films, as a shrewd businesswoman who owns the studios that make her movies. Her career has never been better, she's popular, the business is booming, she's recently bought herself a lavish mansion, and she's getting to perform amazing stunts. Things are going great, except for the fact that she's still haunted by the events that happened in Arkham years ago.

During her previous trip to Arkham (during the events of Mask of Silver) Betsy was witness to a strange event, and lost some of her friends during a fire on a film shoot. Her friends didn't die though, they disappeared into a mirror, never to be seen again; including her boyfriend. But when Betsy receives news that one of the missing has reappeared in Arkham, and is being taken care of in an institute, she decides that she needs to return to the city to find answers.

Needing to get to Arkham as soon as she can Betsy asks the pilot who helped her film her latest stunt, Winifred Habbamock, to take her across the country.  Shortly after arriving in Arkham the two of them meet Tom, a bookseller who's in trouble with some local bootleggers because they're after a book that he's ailed to deliver. This book, the Deadly Grimoire, is said to be cursed to bring trouble to however has it, yet thanks to the promise of being able to open special pathways the local criminals want it badly. Now Betsy and Winifred find themselves caught up in Tom's plight, and have to help to find the missing book before it's too late.

I'm sorry to say that Mask of Silver is the only book in the Arkham Horror series that I've yet to read, as such, when it came to reading The Deadly Grimoire I was worried that I was going to start at something of a disadvantage; that I might get lost as to who everyone is and what's going on. Luckily, Rosemary Jones makes the book really accessible to new readers, and whilst it is a sequel for sure it feels a lot like its own adventure where knowledge of the last book isn't needed to enjoy things.

Having been used to seeing Arkham Horror stories following hardened detectives, academics, and reporters Betsy felt like a big change to the kind of person that these stories normally centre on. She's brash, opinionated, has an in-your-face attitude. She's a woman who's used to being the boss, calling the shots, and getting what she wants. She has an energy that we don't normally get to see from people living in Arkham, a kind of life to her that is normally ground down and worn out by long-time exposure to the grimness of the city.

Winifred is very similar in a lot of ways. She's a woman who's had to fight every single day in order to become the person she is. She's not only working in a male dominated field, but thriving in it. She's in a position of power and respect that a lot of people would love to see her stripped from, so she has a fierceness to her that she's needed in order to survive. She's also a woman of colour, and has had to live with being looked down upon by white people, and these experiences have definitely shaped her too. In contrast to the two women Tom is kind of what you normally expect from an Arkham book. He's a bit dour, he's not very outgoing, and he's a very insular man who's more than happy to spend his time around books instead of people (I feel you there Tom).

However, despite these differences in outlooks, these varying personalities, the three of them make for a pretty decent team. Each of them brings something different to the table, and they definitely help to support each other's weaknesses. There are times where they end up getting in trouble, not really thinking things through and get into bad situations, but they're always able to get through it by working together as a team.

Whilst the central three characters are great, they're really the only people in the book that we get any chance to get to know other than the two primary antagonists. These two, a strange doctor who runs a private clinic and seems obsessed with strange seaweed, and a bootlegger who runs a speakeasy and seems to support her local community of Innsmouth, don't really go beyond first impressions. Whilst the two of them are definitely interesting, I always found myself wanting to learn more about them. I know that they weren't the focus of the book, and that Jones had the rest of the story to tell, but I was left wishing we'd had more time with them. Perhaps if Jones ends up writing a third Arkham Horror novel these will be characters that get to make a return appearance.

The Deadly Grimoire is an interesting addition to the Arkham Horror line, one that brings a very different kind of energy to things. It has more of a focus on the glory days of Hollywood, features silent movie stars, stung pilots, and dangerous bootleggers over the more otherworldly horror aspects. Whilst this may leave some people wanting more cosmic horror than is in the book, those wanting to spend some time with some interesting characters and getting to know a bit more about Arkham will come away satisfied.


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