Curse of the Reaper
A Novel
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- £13.49
Publisher Description
Scream meets The Shining in this page-turning horror tale about an aging actor haunted by the slasher movie villain he brought to life.
Decades after playing the titular killer in the 80s horror franchise Night of the Reaper, Howard Browning has been reduced to signing autographs for his dwindling fanbase at genre conventions. When the studio announces a series reboot, the aging thespian is crushed to learn he’s being replaced in the iconic role by heartthrob Trevor Mane, a former sitcom child-star who’s fresh out of rehab. Trevor is determined to stay sober and revamp his image while Howard refuses to let go of the character he created, setting the stage for a cross-generational clash over the soul of a monster. But as Howard fights to reclaim his legacy, the sinister alter ego consumes his unraveling mind, pushing him to the brink of violence. Is the method actor succumbing to madness or has the devilish Reaper taken on a life of its own?
In his razor-sharp debut novel, film and television writer Brian McAuley melds wicked suspense with dark humor and heart. Curse of the Reaper is a tightly plotted thriller that walks the tightrope between the psychological and the supernatural, while characters struggling with addiction and identity bring to light the harrowing cost of Hollywood fame.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Despite McAuley's experience as a horror film screenwriter (Dismissed), his debut novel is long on gore, short on scares, and adds nothing to the clichéd trope of an actor becoming obsessed with his signature role. In 2005 Los Angeles, 65-year-old Howard Browning, best known for portraying the sadistic killer the Reaper in a series of 1980s slasher flicks, is still trying to profit from appearances at horror conventions despite the steep decline in attendees' interest in him. He has just been diagnosed with Alzheimer's when he learns that the series is being rebooted, with his part to be played by Trevor Mane, a former child star now in and out of rehab for substance abuse. The news of Howard's replacement coincides with disturbing violent outbursts that he can't control, leading him to fear that the Reaper has taken over his mind, leaving him "a helpless spectator with another force at the helm." Predictable violence follows as Browning struggles to preserve his legacy and sanity. McAuley never makes the popularity of the Reaper, who punctuates kills with groan-worthy one-liners, plausible, undercutting the core of his plot. Few will be surprised by how it all plays out or feel any fear along the way. This is one to skip.