Wolf Worm by T. KingfisherMy rating: 4 of 5 stars
I've read plenty of T. Kingfisher's books, but this one is one of the most disturbing stories she's ever written. (Seriously, if you have an insect and/or a worm phobia, do not tackle this book. There are several points in the narrative where you will throw it against the wall and run away screaming.) Nevertheless, once everything was set up and the dominoes started to fall, I couldn't put it down. I stayed up until well after midnight to finish it.
This is a Southern gothic, which means that the atmosphere and setting figure prominently. We are in North Carolina at the turn of the century, where artist and illustrator Sonia Wilson has arrived to chart and sketch the extensive insect collection of noted naturalist Dr. Matthias Halder. Dr Halder's life's work has a focus on parasitic insects (with a special emphasis on botflies and screwworms) and he needs someone to paint the many bugs in his collection. Sonia, left adrift and nearly penniless after the death of her father (because society is so kind to unmarried women over 30 in 1899), takes the job and naturally has no idea of what she's getting herself into.
Due to the nature of the genre, the plot elements take a while to set up. This may make the opening chapters feel like slow going, but don't skimp. From the huge and strangely empty main house, to the whispers of "blood thieves" in the surrounding woods, to the supremely talented illustrator who preceded Sonia and whose presence still lingers in her rooms, to the odd locked shed on the back of the property that Sonia spots Dr. Halder visiting at night, carrying a live chicken...everything has its place and purpose. When it all comes together and the story shifts into high gear, you are left gasping. Then there is the twist that takes the story into not supernatural, but more scientific horror, and how the author puts a unique spin on what could have easily been a cliche.
Say that you were a scientist who studied parasites. There is only so much that you can observe from dead specimens. You need to watch their process through living flesh. But host animals are small and often hard to keep alive, particularly if you wish them to be infested over and over. How often can you pull a screwworm out of a rabbit before it dies of massive infection?
Say that you learned about another kind of human. One who heals at an astonishing rate. One that feeds on blood and viscera and who can endure astonishing hardships.
Say that your wife was about to run away with someone, and you caught them. You shot him and crammed his body into the shed you had once kept animals in, expecting him to die, but instead he healed, and you realized that he was one of these others.
Say that you realized this was the solution to your problem. A subject that would not die, no matter how many holes you put in him, digging screwworms out of his flesh. No matter how many botflies lived beneath his skin. An endless source of material for your studies...assuming that you were willing to commit atrocities that no one should inflict on another living being.
Say that you hated him enough to do it anyway.
If this excerpt squicks you out, be warned--because Kingfisher goes all the way with her premise. There are flies and worms galore here, and we are shown in icky, loving detail what they can do. It gives the protagonist PTSD, and maybe the reader as well. Nevertheless, this is one of the author's best books. Sonia is one of Kingfisher's patented older, sensible heroines, who tackles the horrors she sees from a pragmatic, scientific point of view (after the initial skin-crawling shock). There isn't a romance in this one (at least not for Sonia) because it isn't necessary. At the end, she is making her own way in the world, working as an artist/illustrator, with some mental scars and more than a few nightmares. The ending is unsettling, and deliberately so, but it couldn't have ended any other way. I guess this is a qualified recommendation, because your enjoyment of the book will definitely depend on your mental and intestinal fortitude--but if you can handle it, it's really good.
View all my reviews






