Confession
time: Joe Hill has entered my ranks of authors whose books are able
to be bought sight unseen. It’s thus I went into Full Throttle
(2019) thinking: “Great title for a novel. Can’t wait to get
into it.” Lo and behold, however, upon the first few pages, it
was quickly apparent Full Throttle is not a novel, rather a
collection. “Oh well,” my brain said, “has a chance
of being just as good.”
After
one of the most heartfelt introductions to any book or collection
I’ve read in a long time, Full Throttle settles into itself,
opening on the story from which the title was taken: “Throttle”,
written with Stephen King. A full-on biker story, it tells of a
troubled father-son relationship, and the test it undergoes one day
after a drug deal goes sour. The punchiest story in the collection
to kick things off, there is a classic King tractor trailer truck
involved, but character presentation and an extended chase sequence
are what make it a success. But for as striking as “Throttle”
is, the second story in the collection, “Dark Carousel”, falls
into ruts all too familiar in horror. About high schoolers and a
haunted fair ground, Hill is able to push the story with good
characterization, but in the end, the reader is better off just
reading Bradbury’s Something Wicked This Way Comes.
Seemingly
written in response to the Stand on Wall Street movement (if youths
standing around holding signs and smoking cigarettes can be called a
movement), “Wolverton Station” tells of a particularly heartless
executive in London, there to open the first international branch of
his firm’s franchise coffee shop. Having fellow train passengers a
degree beyond human puts him in a different mood, however, than just
greed. If only the sentiment of this story could be true more often…
Not quite fantasy, and not quite reality, “By the Silver Water of
Lake Champlain” tells of a group of children who discover a
dinosaur washed up on the shores of a lake. Interestingly domestic
given the fantastical premise, Hill seems to have had a scene that
wouldn’t let go until he put it in writing.
A
story that takes an amazing left turn, “Faun” tells of a group of
rich hunters looking for more than the game they kill on the plains
of Africa. Getting what they pay for in an unassuming Maine cabin,
this is a story that has the reader thinking one way, then throws a
wrench in the works in positive fashion. Paean to books and reading,
and a story that tugs at the heart strings, “Late Returns” tells
about a man whose parents recently died, and who now must attend to
their estate. Coming across a library book his mother forgot to
return many years prior, he decides to do the right thing, and in
doing so has a new gig that just might be the cure for his blues—a
simple idea lovingly crafted. Written as a (long) series of tweets,
“Twittering from the Circus of the Dead” ends up becoming more
literal than is perhaps good for it—like a Night of the Living Dead
relayed by a teenage journalist.
Ostensibly
science fiction—a rarity for Hill, “All I Care About Is You”
tells of a young girl who finds herself in need of manual labor, and
gets it in the form of an old, coin-charged robot. The two having a
wonderful adventure on her birthday, it’s charming in
non-saccharine fashion—something the father’s former job tries to
dissolve with incongruence. An undeclared tribute to Lucius Shepard,
“Thumbprint” tells of a veteran of the War in Iraq and the
troubles she drags home with her once the fighting is done. Like
Shepard, Hill captures the edge of sanity that warfare brings upon
the person, and can never fully let go. Then there is the excellent
“The Devil on the Staircase”. Experimental in form (the text
takes the shape of a staircase), it’s an almost mythological tale
of the choice one man faces in the slopes of Italian mountains, and
the unexpected after effects.
Children
of the Corn without the corn, “In the Tall Grass”, written
with Stephen King, tells of a brother and sister who get lost, you
guess it, in the tall grass while on a cross-country trip. The scene
only becoming more horrific (natch), the father-son writer duo
squeeze every ounce of substance from the setting—as cheaply
Hollywood as it may be. Technically a post-apocalyptic story, “You
Are Released” nevertheless occurs entirely within an airplane
flying above the US as nuclear war breaks out on the world. Rotating
among the passengers and crew, the story presents multiple
perspectives on war and cultural differences, all from scenes and
interaction that feel human—a complement, that.
In
the end, Full Throttle is a solid collection of short fiction.
The stories varied and surprising, there are only a couple blasé
pieces. But with “Throttle”, “Faun”, “The Devil on the
Staircase”, and others, Hill creates unique slices of fiction that
twist and turn through the lives of real people. Overall, the author
remains one of the strong, (mostly) original voices writing fiction
today.
Published
between 2007 and 2019, the following are the thirteen stories
collected in Full Throttle:
Throttle
(with Stephen King)
Dark
Carousel
Wolverton
Station
By
the Silver Water of Lake Champlain
Faun
Late
Returns
All
I Care About Is You
Thumbprint
The
Devil on the Staircase
Twittering
from the Circus of the Dead
Mums
In
the Tall Grass (with Stephen King)
You
Are Released
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