Bad Cree by Jessica Johns
This is a horror novel about Mackenzie, who has started having increasingly realistic dreams that she can sometimes bring things back from, including waking up from a dream of drowning actually with water in her lungs. The dreams center on a camping trip she had with her sister before her death, and when she also receives a text from her dead sister in the waking world, she decides to return home to her family and community to get to the bottom of what is happening to her and what happened to her sister.
I liked this one! I will say it feels more like literary fiction with horror elements rather than straight horror, but I've mentioned before I'm a huge baby when it comes to horror, so it worked for me. I think a good comparison would be When No One is Watching by Alyssa Cole- both novels do have a greater, more traditionally spooky force at work, but the real focus is on the creeping horror of loss and isolation brought upon by individualistic, capitalist culture that separates us from our communities. The creature haunting Mackenzie and her family was brought here by capitalist greed, but since the people who enacted that greed are protected from it by their social mobility, it has instead turned towards the vulnerable people who don't have that freedom as a result of centuries of disenfranchisement.
Another major theme is of course grief and how isolation from our communities can make us more distanced from ourselves as well and keep us trapped in that grief and never fully processing it. The two themes do influence each other enough to be fundamentally unentangleable. The isolation brought on by this culture creates depression which in turn creates more grief, creating more isolation. The cyclical nature of this intergenerational trauma is then reflected in the cycles of Mackenzie's dreams. She experiences them over and over again, unable to figure out a way to save herself or her sister, just as these systems trap people into cycles with no clear escape.
Which is why I'm a bit more forgiving of my biggest issue with the novel- like most literary fiction, the plot really meanders to the point where it can often feel like nothing is happening. Which is I don't like literary fiction. But here, it feels intentional for the characters to be stuck and need to sit together and process things before they can actually confront the creature. It still creates quite a slow pace, but because there is a sense of purpose to it, it's not an agonizing one.
Overall, it's a pretty good book. The main character can often be frustrating in how frequently she repeats her mistakes, but again, that feels like it contributes to the structure. It's not a fun book to read, but it is a high quality one. 4.5⭐️