Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

Bereavements

ebook

More typical of Lortz's preoccupation with infinite sadness and the monstrosities which it produces is Bereavements, re-released as part of the WhiteWolf / Borealis horror line in 1995. The story is both original and fascinating: A wealthy New York widow, in attempting to come to terms with the death of her teenage son, searches for ways to cheat mortality. One is to advertise in the Village Voice for a replacement son, using the ad, "Mother who lost son, seeks son who lost mother." This ad attracts three very striking and disturbed characters who "court her favors," while she pursues another more grotesque form of grieving, that of keeping the body of her son, Jamie, preserved through cryogenics. These young men all have their own motives for responding to the ad, and it is the interplay of their desires against the widow's overwhelming need to escape her state of "bereavement" that moves the novel. The horror scenes are very subtle, again more poetic than horrific, although they are indeed darkly disturbing. And the glimpses inside the disturbed mind of Mrs. Evans, the widow, are astounding. Although Bereavements ends with a suicide, a murder, and borderline necrophilia, it is ultimately a story that explores the depths of grief and love, even their darker manifestations. It is about what happens to humans when, as Mrs. Evans describes it, are deprived of "ruthlessly — especially hope and joy."


Expand title description text
Publisher: The Permanent Press

Kindle Book

  • Release date: July 24, 2012

OverDrive Read

  • ISBN: 1579622925
  • Release date: July 24, 2012

EPUB ebook

  • ISBN: 1579622925
  • File size: 544 KB
  • Release date: July 24, 2012

Formats

Kindle Book
OverDrive Read
EPUB ebook

subjects

Fiction Horror

Languages

English

More typical of Lortz's preoccupation with infinite sadness and the monstrosities which it produces is Bereavements, re-released as part of the WhiteWolf / Borealis horror line in 1995. The story is both original and fascinating: A wealthy New York widow, in attempting to come to terms with the death of her teenage son, searches for ways to cheat mortality. One is to advertise in the Village Voice for a replacement son, using the ad, "Mother who lost son, seeks son who lost mother." This ad attracts three very striking and disturbed characters who "court her favors," while she pursues another more grotesque form of grieving, that of keeping the body of her son, Jamie, preserved through cryogenics. These young men all have their own motives for responding to the ad, and it is the interplay of their desires against the widow's overwhelming need to escape her state of "bereavement" that moves the novel. The horror scenes are very subtle, again more poetic than horrific, although they are indeed darkly disturbing. And the glimpses inside the disturbed mind of Mrs. Evans, the widow, are astounding. Although Bereavements ends with a suicide, a murder, and borderline necrophilia, it is ultimately a story that explores the depths of grief and love, even their darker manifestations. It is about what happens to humans when, as Mrs. Evans describes it, are deprived of "ruthlessly — especially hope and joy."


Expand title description text