The Bright Lands by John Fram
There’s a thriving sub-genre of suspense novels about a protagonist returning to their childhood home in the wake of tragedy and uncovering old secrets, and in theory, I like the idea of mashing that together with something like Friday Night Lights. A small town in Texas that revolves around high school football is a great setting for exploring the corrupt underbelly of respectable society, and the hints of Lovecraftian horror further emphasize everyone’s cultish devotion to the team’s star players. Debut author John Fram is also utterly unafraid to take on the rampant homophobia at the heart of American sports culture, which I definitely appreciate.
I’m not really sold on the execution of all these themes, however. Although the gay representation is admirable, the narrative falls into the tired trope of all the worst bigots being closeted themselves, and it feels like we brush past the implications of that. I also lose track of the emotional truth to the characters as the story goes on, especially as the supernatural elements grow in stature. A late-stage burst of gun violence seems intended to shock, but since the relevant figures have long stopped resembling actual people by that point, I’ve greeted it with just a shrug instead.
There are still some interesting ideas here, but as a finished product, it doesn’t quite add up to a satisfying whole.
[Content warning for police abuse, sexual assault, racism, and various slurs.]
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