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We Are Monsters

door Brian Kirk

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Fiction. Horror. HTML:

The Apocalypse has come to the Sugar Hill mental asylum.

He's the hospital's newest, and most notorious, patientâ??a paranoid schizophrenic who sees humanity's dark side.

Luckily he's in good hands. Dr. Eli Alpert has a talent for healing tortured souls. And his protégé is working on a cure for schizophrenia, a drug that returns patients to their former selves. But unforeseen side effects are starting to emerge. Forcing prior traumas to the surface. Setting inner demons free.

Monsters have been unleashed inside the Sugar Hill mental asylum. They don't have fangs or claws. They look just like you or m… (meer)

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A doctor motivated by greed and unchecked ambition believes he has created a cure for schizophrenia. But the only way to prove the drug's capabilities is through testing....so he decides to test it on mental patients. While that is horrific enough as it is....it gets worse. When he gives the drug to a famous serial killer, there is an unforeseen side effect. This wonder drug sets the mentally ill free from their demons...by releasing that darkness into the world. The dark halls of the Sugar Hill Asylum now hold the inner demons of The Apocalypse Killer.

This is a horror story with an underlying point about how society views and treats those with mental illness. This story means a bit more to me because my family is currently experiencing the deterioration of an elderly parent with bipolar and the beginning stages of dementia. As I finished reading this book, she was involuntarily hospitalized for the second time in six weeks, so I had a bit of a different reaction to this book than some readers might. Society has a mindset about those with mental illness, often viewing them as bothersome annoyances rather than people with a medical issue. And medical treatment, at times, seems to just be experimenting with mixes of medication to keep them controllable and quiet, rather than an attempt to return them to a condition where they can function/survive within the world. It's a world filled with medications, doctors appointments, fear of hospitalization, and fears/experiences that other people don't understand. The horror of dementia is that there is no going back....there's no way to return a wonderful woman to who she was for almost 80 years. That person is gone....locked inside a short circuiting brain. What people see now is just an out of control, elderly woman with a foul mouth and nasty disposition. They don't realize that up until a year ago I never heard a cross word come out of her mouth, let alone strings of curse words and horrible, hurtful insults. It is soul-crushingly sad to see someone deteriorate slowly and permanently. And it's hard to maintain patience and kindness when she is angry/abusive/out of control. So, this story about a doctor seeking fame and fortune at the expense of the mentally ill really hit home with me. What if medical staff, or the public at large, could see and experience the horrible things that the mentally ill deal with that come from their own minds? What if those who look at a medical career as a way to become rich rather than a chance to do good and heal people were confronted with the downside of their actions?

Very scary story....with a bittersweet edge to it for me.

This is the first book by Brian Kirk that I have read. I will definitely be looking for more by this author. Enjoyable story....with a hard truth beneath the horror.

**I voluntarily read a review copy of this book from Flame Tree Press. All opinions expressed are entirely my own** ( )
  JuliW | Nov 22, 2020 |
Please note that I received this book via NetGalley. This did not affect my rating or review.

Eh. I tried to get into this. I gave up halfway through and just grudgingly finished this thing over a period of like four weeks. Bah. It had a great premise, it just got boring to me halfway through. And then I kept finding other books to read instead. Maybe if I hadn't started King's "The Institute" (nope still not done) and seen some similar themes here, it would have grabbed me. Honestly it reminds me a lot of La Valle's "The Devil in Silver" with too many themes going on to settle on just one main thread.

"We Are Monsters" follows a a troubled psychiatrist Dr. Alex Drexler who starts to do experimental trails on the criminally insane at the asylum he works at. This ties into a serial killer who just arrives, Crosby Nelson, and of course bad consequences emerge. I didn't really like anyone in this because any doctor with a God complex is always going to start some shit. Honestly parts of this book reminds me a bit of old school Koontz with his whole debate about science moving faster than humanity and the consequences that emerge.

There are other characters in this book, Dr. Eli Alpert, Angela, of course Dr. Drexler and Crosby (woo boy that name). I just didn't care after a while what was going on with anyone though.

The writing was stilted after a while and some of the sentences made me scratch my head. Since this was an ARC, maybe the final version gets more polished. The flow just gets dragged down after a while too. I maybe went okay then, can we please move on like a dozen times.

The book definitely reads like a Southern Gothic novel I have to say. It's usually one of my fav genres. I just got bored and didn't feel wholly engaged by the time we get to the ending. ( )
  ObsidianBlue | Jul 1, 2020 |
Surreal, Atmospheric Horror!

Brian Kirk is definitely gifted in how he weaves a world or should I say asylum that has elements of Lovecraft throughout while taking the time to build his characters to enhance the story he is telling.
Everyone at the asylum has problems whether they are patients or the ones treating them.
A psychiatrist tries experimental cures for his patients and in the process, releases his most dangerous patient's darker side.
The descriptive horror of the unleashed nightmare was imaginative to the point where I felt like I was living the nightmare with the characters in the novel. Definitely an entralling and unsettling read. ( )
  Veronica.Sparrow | May 14, 2020 |
Fun story to read. Not super freaky, but great commentary on people and what we are underneath. ( )
  CaseyMorris | Jan 21, 2020 |
This book takes a long time to get to the real horror part. The chapters up to that point are all well written but it's not until after half way that things really go up a notch (or ten).
The other problem I had with the first half is that there is too much backstory for too many characters. It made focusing on one character impossible, and also made it hard to figure out where the key arc of the story was. As a result, I found it difficult to keep the story straight and frequently felt disinclined to pick it up to keep reading.
When the story does head into dark and strange waters, it's an intriguing and original narrative.
Overall, the writing is good, the story idea solid, but the novel could have done with some ruthless paring to become a better paced and gripping read. ( )
  AngelaJMaher | Dec 30, 2019 |
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Fiction. Horror. HTML:

The Apocalypse has come to the Sugar Hill mental asylum.

He's the hospital's newest, and most notorious, patientâ??a paranoid schizophrenic who sees humanity's dark side.

Luckily he's in good hands. Dr. Eli Alpert has a talent for healing tortured souls. And his protégé is working on a cure for schizophrenia, a drug that returns patients to their former selves. But unforeseen side effects are starting to emerge. Forcing prior traumas to the surface. Setting inner demons free.

Monsters have been unleashed inside the Sugar Hill mental asylum. They don't have fangs or claws. They look just like you or m

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