In
the Flesh by K D Grace
Self-published
with Smashwords and Amazon, 2016
No
one writes paranormal fiction like KD Grace. In penning her tales of
myths and magic, she plumbs psychological and spiritual depths that
most authors don’t even realize exist. Ms. Grace ignores tropes and
conventions, following the trail of her stories down the rabbit hole
of her own fertile imagination. The truths she unearths amaze,
arouse, terrify and delight.
In
the Flesh shows more of this narrative serendipity than any of
her other paranormal titles I’ve read. The novel began as a serial
posted on her blog; I suspect that each installment was as much a
discovery for her as it was for her fans. Certainly I found myself
continually surprised by the story’s twists and turns, though in
retrospect none of the plot devices seemed implausible. I just didn’t
see them coming.
That’s
a compliment. As anyone who reads my reviews will know,
predictability in a story can really kill my enjoyment.
The
tale begins when author Susan Innes is invited by her close friend
Annie to visit Chapel House, the de-consecrated church Annie
purchased six months previously. Susan finds Annie much changed. Her
formerly plump, boisterous girlfriend has become skinny, pale and
distracted, obsessed with a mysterious, invisible lover who she
claims is God. As Susan watches Annie bathed in moonlight in front of
the old altar, moaning and writhing with pleasure, she tries to
rationalize her friend’s strange behavior as some sort of
psychological illness.
However,
Susan herself senses the presence of the unseen being who haunts the
church’s half-ruined halls and overgrown garden. She feels his
erotic pull, hears the promises of unspeakable ecstasy he whispers to
her. Though she sees that Annie has been literally consumed by her
spectral paramour and understands she is in danger of a similar fate,
she cannot resist falling under his spell. Only the arrival of a
burly workman named Michael saves her from losing herself completely.
Michael
rips her out of the Guardian’s sphere of influence and takes her as
his lover, but he cannot totally eradicate Susan’s irrational lust
for the invisible but overwhelmingly seductive spirit. When the
Guardian uses Annie to lure Susan back to his territory, Michael
enlists the aid of allies equally powerful, and equally dangerous.
I
don’t want to spoil things by saying too much more about the plot.
However, the emotional and erotic intensity continue to build
throughout the tale. There’s magic and terror and death, plus lots
of sex—sex that
involves deeper connections than the purely physical. As she did in
her Lakeland Witches series, Ms. Grace explores the ways in which
sexual experience is a gateway to new capabilities and states of
consciousness.
As
an author, though, there’s one aspect of the plot that I just have
to mention. Susan gradually comes to understand that the act of
writing is literally infused with magic. Her writing shapes reality.
Even the supernatural creatures who surround her recognize and honor
her awesome power as a true scribe—a
woman whose imagination can alter the world, a woman whose words are
made flesh.
I
understand.
This
is what it feels like to be a writer, on the best days when the ideas
are flowing and the words write themselves. We’re immersed in the
sacred act of creation, totally sure of ourselves, molding the
universe in subtle but important ways. And this is perhaps what I
loved best about In the Flesh: the fact that Susan manages to
save herself and her companions not by casting a spell or wielding
some enchanted sword, but by writing a story.
2 comments:
Totally bowled over by your wonderful review, Lisabet, and over the moon that you enjoyed In The Flesh! Your opinion means a great deal to me.
KD xx
I only call them as I see them, KD...
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