November 06, 2024

Mira Gonzalez: "The Darkness Behind the Door" (ARC Review)

Title: The Darkness Behind the Door [on Amazon | on Goodreads]
Series: None
Author: Mira Gonzalez [Site | Goodreads]
Genres: Supernatural (not exactly...but I don't have a Fantasy Room in my blog, so that's the closest I could get), Contemporary
Year: 2024
Age: 14+ (technically, this is a NA book, but suitable for younger teens as well. See the WARNING! section though)
Stars: 4/5
Pros: Gripping, cinematic and ultimately heartwarming (though with a side of sadness), with easy-to-love characters. Combines two tropes that never get old in a fresh combo.
Cons: At least one of the major reveals isn't hard to see coming. The prose would have benefited from a little more editing.
WARNING! (TW list provided by the author): Blood, gore, death, suicide, religious trauma, homophobia, profane language, implied sexual content, drug use. (More): Bullying, car accident, kidnapping, grief.
Will appeal to: Those who like a blend of mayhem, magic, mystery and memories. Those who don't mind a sizeable amount of queer awakening/coming-of-age, slow-burn romance and familial love spiking up such blend.

Blurb: When a phantom moose nearly runs Theo's car off an icy Alaskan road, Theo succumbs to curiosity, following the moose's trail to a door hidden amongst the trees. Despite the threat of becoming the latest victim in a string of mysterious disappearances, Theo crosses the threshold. To his horror, the door vanishes, stranding him in a monster-infested alternate reality. Looming adult responsibilities are forgotten as Theo must fight just to survive. Inside the surreal dimension behind the door, Theo finds allies who hold the encroaching darkness at bay: a sword-wielding man named Archer with a strange case of amnesia, and a shapeshifting dragon named Zephyr. A sinister phenomenon threatens to consume Theo as he grapples with his sense of identity and growing feelings for Archer; the longer he remains in this realm, the more his own memories slip away. With darkness closing in and his time running out, Theo must unravel the secrets his companions harbor and confront his own inner demons if he hopes to find a way back to the world he knows before all is lost to the shadows. (Amazon)

Review: First off...DISCLAIMER: I requested this title on NetGalley. Thanks to Victory Editing NetGalley Co-op for providing a temporary ecopy. This didn't influence my review in any way.

OF TWO MINDS

Let's get it out of the way: this book is a VERY difficult one to review without spoilers. What starts as your average portal fantasy novel (though with a college-aged protagonist, which makes it different enough) soon takes an unexpected turn - or more like a series of them - and morphs into a coming-of-age story with one foot firmly planted in reality. The clues to the final reveal are all there, but the author does a great job of covering her tracks (except in one case - at least one of the twists was easy to figure out, though I didn't expect its follow-up) and unfolding the truth a bit at a time. Then again, the imaginative setting(s), immersive adventures and sweet, slow-burn romance are guaranteed to redirect your attention from the most telling details 😉. Come for the engrossing, cleverly built alternate reality, suspended between coziness and horror/despair, and the mystery behind it; stay for the engaging characters searching for their place in life, and battling trauma and personal demons (not all of them metaphorical) as much as they do the monsters and darkness in their portal universe. [...]

IT'S BEEN A JOURNEY

I have to say, if you're not a fan of present-tense narratives, that may dampen your enjoyment of this story, though personally I think it works well for its (dark)-fable-like vibe. And admittedly, this is a debut novel, and at times it shows: there are patches where the dialogue doesn't flow effortlessly, a few repetitions, small typos, and the first section of chapter 27 (in past tense) is a huge infodump all at once, especially in the middle (so to speak - it's more like, towards the end) of a dialogue-heavy book. But the story and the characters, as I said, make the ride more than worth it (and that's not to say that the writing is bad by any means - just a little inexperienced). Theo brings an interesting perspective to the table (especially due to being biracial and a questioning young man in more ways than one); Archer has a lot of baggage to deal with, but he's not your average grumpy hero, and the author takes him through an ultimately wholesome emotional pilgrimage. The reveal about Zephyr, and the one chapter from her point of view, will elicit a whole spectrum of emotions - I can't say more because I don't want to spoil your experience. At the end of the day, TDBTD is a dark yet charming, sad yet hopeful novel that has a lot to say about identity, love, family (in the broadest sense), and the strength we can find in all these things when it's time to fight the monsters we meet or create by ourselves. 

For more Supernatural books click here.
For more Contemporary/Contemporary with a Twist books click here.

2 comments:

  1. It's always fun when the author is able to surprise you. Glad you enjoyed this one!

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