Cass Neary was involved in the New York punk scene of the 70s, photographing junkies, corpses, and herself as characters; think Weegee meets Cindy Sherman. She published one cult classic book, then was raped by a stranger at knifepoint. Things stopped for her, and the world moved on and left her behind.

Thirty years later, she's still living in the same apartment, still drawn to dead things and damaged people, doing any drug she can lay her hands on, having fucked-up relationships with men and women, and indulging in random petty theft. When her drug dealer offers her a gig interviewing a reclusive and retired woman photographer whom Cass admires, she goes for it because she really needs the money.

The gig is on an island in Maine, and the chilly atmosphere makes you cold just reading it. Cass discovers that the job isn't what she thought, the area has a whole lot of disturbing history, and there may still be a killer on the loose. The mystery is less than mysterious, but the book is about character and atmosphere and suspense, not puzzle-solving.

Cass is self-destructive and unlikable in a way one doesn't often see with middle-aged female characters who are the protagonist of their own book. That is, I actually did... maybe like isn't quite the right word... but I did find her compelling and rooted for her, even when she was doing objectively terrible things like photographing dying people rather than calling 911. "Generation loss" is a photography term, and she's extremely convincing as a photographer. A big part of why I enjoyed spending the length of a book in her dark, depressed, nihilistic head was that it means you see through her photographer's eyes.

Monda is an excellent narrator for Cass Neary. I first encountered her in Grady Hendrix's We Sold Our Souls, and she's great here with an extremely different type of hard-edged, ground-down middle-aged woman who was famous in a niche way many years ago.

There's some light "is it fantasy" elements, which I enjoyed. Cass has some experiences in childhood which might be glimpses of cosmic horror or might be hallucinations or have other mundane explanations. She can sense people's damage or at least believes that she can, which again might be a very specific psychic gift or just a very specific type of intuition/keen observation. Or maybe she just thinks she can sense damage, and she's never proved wrong because who isn't damaged, especially in her social circles?

(Personally, I vote for "yes, she looked into an actual cosmic horror and it looked back which explains a lot" and "specific intuition/observation plus hang out with dealers and addicts, and it's not hard to find damaged people.")

scioscribe: (mcu: gamora)

From: [personal profile] scioscribe


I'm so glad you liked this. (If you keep reading the series and get to Hard Light, there are bits that feel adjacent to "You're Wrong about Misericorde.") Cass really is such an unconventional female character, and I especially appreciate how grounded she is in her context: she lived through a very particular period, and both the lingering punk scene and what it's like to be left behind by cultural change are both so well-described. As are all the photos! I especially wanted to see Aphrodite's. This book also creates convincing artistic geniuses with convincing descriptions of their art, which is vanishingly rare.

After our Eyes of Laura Mars conversation last night, I keep imagining Cass Neary crossovers I want.
scioscribe: (Default)

From: [personal profile] scioscribe


Oh, neat! Does Hard Light involve filmmaking?

It does! IIRC, Available Dark, the next one, also involves photographs, but then Hard Light is filmmaking. I still need to read the new one, The Book of Lamps and Banners.

POOR MARTY, but also, I would kill to see that.
landingtree: Small person examining bottlecap (Default)

From: [personal profile] landingtree


I'm really pleased to hear Hard Light has filmmaking! I just read Black Light, which is full of filmmaking people but doesn't center them much. I'm glad she circles back around the topic, because I really liked the bits of it that were there.
minoanmiss: sleeping lady sculpture (Sleeping Lady)

From: [personal profile] minoanmiss

*


*makes a good note about this fascinating sounding book*
oracne: turtle (Default)

From: [personal profile] oracne


I need to catch up on this series. I love noir, but only in small doses.
sabotabby: (books!)

From: [personal profile] sabotabby


That sounds so up my alley that I need to move in.

I don't love audiobooks but looks like my library has it in ebook. Awesome.
carbonel: Beth wearing hat (Default)

From: [personal profile] carbonel


This discussion is reminding me strongly of John M. Ford's short story "Preflash." It's been anthologized in several places, but I first encountered it when he read it during an author's reading at a convention. It's SF/F tinged with horror.
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