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THE DISSONANCE by Shaun Hamill

THE DISSONANCE

by Shaun Hamill

Pub Date: July 23rd, 2024
ISBN: 9780593317259
Publisher: Pantheon

The surviving members of a powerful teenage coven of magicians reunite in East Texas.

Much like Hamill’s debut, A Cosmology of Monsters (2019), this meaty horror novel is a treat for readers whose nostalgia gravitates to the likes of Stand by Me, Twin Peaks, or, most thematically, Stephen King’s It. In a similar vein to Chuck Wendig’s Miriam Black novels or Stephen Graham Jones’ Indian Lake trilogy, Hamill takes some ordinary young people and puts them through the metaphysical wringer to see what’s left at the end. In Clegg, Texas, circa the late 1990s, we meet best pals Hal, Athena, and Erin. Their chance encounter with a lost boy in the woods leads them to classmate Peter and his grandfather, Professor Elijah Marsh, an eccentric practitioner of the titular magic who teaches them the ropes. “This power, this energy, this Dissonance?” explains the professor. “It’s born from discomfort. From unhappiness. From pain. This world we occupy, and which we hope to control, is a broken, violent place.” Grappling with forces they don’t really understand leads to a disaster that claims many lives, including one of their own. Unfortunately, our heroes aren’t in great shape two decades later. Erin is a barista going nowhere, Athena parlayed her magical talents into running an occult bookstore, and recovering alcoholic Hal is on his way to prison for murder. When an invitation to a 20th-anniversary memorial service arrives, no one wants to revisit the scene of the crime. But after a well-meaning closeted teen named Owen botches a necromancy spell and finds himself playing Renfield to a bad actor, they’re forced to reunite not just to confront their past but employ all their collective gifts to save the world. The rules governing Hamill’s fantastical universe can be a little hazy, but when the nightmare-fraught tale is filled with monsters, teleportation, time travel, and other supernatural wonders, it’s more fun to embrace the chaos.

A wistful, emotional roller coaster that finds worse than memories waiting at home.