This is No Christmas Carol
Dead of Winter Review
Dead of Winter
It’s often said that the best fiction is built on a foundation of truth. And in Dead of Winter, Angus Houvouras manages to do just that by expanding on the well documented premise of the Nazi penchant for pushing the bounds of scientific and medical experimentation, without any regard for the consequences.
So, bearing that in mind,
just take a quick look at the blurb:
******
The Third
Reich has created an undead Nazi killing machine. Can a handful of American
soldiers prevent this seemingly indestructible monster from escaping the POW
camp and prevent the research of a crazed doctor from turning the world into a
battlefield of bloodthirsty bioengineered machines?
******
Short and sweet, eh?
And cunningly understated
too, as Houvouras initially introduces us to the story in 1949 – as told from
the point of view of an investigator – hunting down those responsible for the
many atrocities committed by the Third Reich during the Second World War. A
subtle strategy, as this opening character is extremely thorough. He’s
resilient. And his actions are portrayed using the flavor of a noir
murder-mystery detective novel.
A clever move, for it not
only draws you in from the outset, but sets the mood for what’s to come very
nicely . . .
And for THAT we then take a
trip back through time, to eastern France in 1944. The German army is in
retreat, leaving certain bases and installations vulnerable to capture and
exploitation by the advancing allied armies. And the master planners of the
Third Reich are worried, because they’ve been abusing their power and treating
the people they’ve oppressed like cattle, experimenting on them, and using foul
means to achieve unholy results.
When a U.S. army unit is
charged with clearing the hamlet of L’hiver, they have no idea of the horrors
that await them, for a secluded facility just outside of town harbors dark
secrets. Oh yes, the Nazis have tried to destroy all trace of the diabolical
machinations taking place there . . . but they weren’t thorough enough, and
when the U.S. army moves in? Let’s just say, what they find is as alarming as
it is hard to believe. And the death count starts to rise, because how do you
kill something that just won’t die?
You’ll find out, in an
engaging, well-paced story that hooks onto the ‘echo’ inside – you know, that
part of us that ‘just has to find out’ what happens next – and leads you along
toward a finale back in 1949, containing a twist that is oh so sweet. . .
A great example of how to end
a thriller properly.
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