CIRQUE
Du FREAK
the
first
book in
a series
of
dozens
by
Darren
Shan
reminded
me of
what it
was like
to be a
kid
again
first
getting
interested
in
horror
and
stories
of a
macabre
design.
The
pages
are
filled
with
that
same
sense of
wonder
that
accompanied
the
discovery
of these
darker
paths as
I first
was to
stroll
upon
them.
The
creepiness
of
spiders,
the
frightfulness
of
werewolves,
snakes,
and all
kinds of
grotesque
and
unnatural
creatures
of the
night.
The
bizarre
and
strange
wonder
of the
freak
show -
and yes,
even the
vampire.
Shan
presents
these
all with
a child
like
enthusiasm
and
sense of
dread
excitement.
As well
he
should.
For the
protagonist
of the
novel is
in fact
a nine
year old
boy. And
the
books
are
written
for
children
of that
age.
CIRQUE
Du FREAK
however
is far
more
than
just a
kids
book. It
is a
tour de
force of
horror
and the
macabre
- the
very
type of
things
that I
can
remember
both
chilling
and
luring
me as a
boy.
Things
that
inspired
me to
explore
their
darker
depths
as I
grew
older.
Twisted,
strange
paths
that
have
lead me
to where
I am
today.
Reading
Shan's
novel, I
felt
again
the
excitement
of those
days,
when
horror
was at
its most
seductive.
And
there is
no doubt
that the
lure of
that
darkness
is what
this
story is
all
about.
Darren
Shan is
most
probably
a pen
name.
What the
author's
real
name is,
I could
not tell
you. For
his
protagonist
shares
the same
moniker.
Nine
year old
Darren
Shan is
the
horror
equivalent
to Harry
Potter.
He is an
ordinary
British
boy
thrust
into
extraordinary
circumstances.
And it
all
begins
with his
macabre
fascination
for a
spider.
A
tarantula,
to be
exact.
Darren
and his
closet
friend
attend a
banned
freak
show
when it
comes to
town.
There,
they
witness
all
kinds of
horrible
and
grotesque
things.
And they
are as
thrilled
as they
are
frightened.
Among
the most
fascinating
of the
creatures
they run
into
there,
is a
performing
tarantula.
One
simply
plays a
special
flute,
and it
can do
all
kinds of
tricks.
Young
Darren
is
lured.
Eventually,
when the
freak
show
closes
down for
the
night
(or day,
as the
case may
be) he
sneaks
in and
steals
the
spider
for
himself.
But this
only
leads to
dire
consequences,
and
opens
the door
for
further
darkness.
For the
spider's
owner
happens
to be a
vampire.
Vampires
are a
dime a
dozen
these
days,
and
there is
nothing
new
about
author
Shan's
vampire.
But that
is not
what the
story is
about.
Rather,
it is
about
one
boy's
first,
tentative
steps
into the
world of
horror.
Isn't
the
vampire
one of
the
first
monsters
you meet
when you
walk
that
path?
Eventually,
many of
us move
beyond
and
explore
other
aspects
of this
shadowy
realm in
which we
have
found
ourselves.
But for
many,
the
vampire
continues
to hold
us
enraptured
- and
yet
repulsed
at the
same
time.
Shan's
younger
version
of
himself
faces
all this
and
more, as
he
begins
his
plight
into the
macabre,
and
eventually
becomes
one of
the
undead
himself.
(Don't
worry,
this is
no
spoiler.
The book
cover
says as
much,
and by
the
title of
the
second
book in
the
series,
THE
VAMPIRE'S
APPRENTICE,
it is
pretty
obvious.)
The real
charm of
CIRQUE
Du FREAK,
however,
is not
the
story
itself,
but in
the way
it is
presented.
Adults
will
find it
entertaining
because
it
brings
them
back to
that
sense of
wonder
they
once
held for
this
world,
and
children,
I would
hope,
will see
through
the eyes
of the
protagonist
just how
exciting
horror
can
really
be.
This is
an
excellent
novel to
bring
the
young
into our
genre,
for it
captures
the
essence
of the
gruesome
and the
scary
and
presents
it in a
way that
will not
overburden
the
child or
drive
them
away.
Rather,
it sucks
them in.
And
surely
that
will
benefit
every
other
author
in this
field.
Like R.
L. Stine
did so
many
years
before
him,
this
series
could
quite
possibly
bring
the next
generation
of
readers
to our
genre
that can
sustain
it for
decades
to come.
It would
be good
if we
had more
Darren
Shan's
out
there
among
us, but
with a
planned
twenty
books
for this
series,
we may
not need
anyone
else. I
can only
wonder
what
other
wonderfully
nasty
and
horrible
things
that
Darren
Shan
will
drudge
up along
the way.
CIRQUE
Du FREAK
gets my
nod for
a Bram
Stoker
Award
nomination
for the
young
audiences
category,
and a
rating
of four
book
wyrms.
http://feoamante.com/Stories/Reviews/ABC/cirque_dufreak.html |