Horror Review: Some of Your Blood by Theodore Sturgeon

This is a retro review just in time for the spooky season!


Some of Your Blood by Theodore Sturgeon
Horror Fiction
Released May 2012
Amazon | Goodreads | Better World Books 
Named one of the Top 40 Horror Books of All Time by the Horror Writers Association, Theodore Sturgeon's dark and foreboding look at the vampire myth was an instant classic when it was originally published. Army psychiatrist Philip Outerbridge receives a confidential folder containing the letters, memos, and transcripts for a young soldier named George Smith--a quiet young man with a terrible past and a shocking secret. As Outerbridge conducts George's therapy, he gradually discovers the truth about George's traumatic childhood, his twisted romance with an older woman named Anna, and the unusual obsession George keeps hidden from the world. With the masterful touch that earned him the Hugo and Nebula awards, Theodore Sturgeon creates a character of both unsettling violence and irresistible humanity, eliciting both horror and sympathy. 

My Thoughts:

This is an older short story that Goodreads says was first published in 1956. Admittedly, I haven’t read much in the way of classic horror and I wasn’t sure the story would work for me. I guess I was expecting it to be dry and slow. What I found instead was a deeply disturbing story with many images that will linger with me for months to come.

This story is about a soldier who calls himself “George”. George is being held in a crowded military psychiatric ward for assaulting a superior. It seems he’s been forgotten there though and they really need his bed for another patient. Psychiatrist Dr. Phil is tasked with going over his case before his release. What he discovers is bizarre and chilling.

George’s story is told in various ways. He writes his own biography for the doctor which takes up a large chunk of the book. This part explores George’s sad, desperate childhood growing up poor with a sick mom and a mean ass drunkard father. I listened to this on audio and narrator Malcolm Hillgartner does an amazing job with these characters, especially George. Initially, I found George’s section sad but as he revealed more tidbits about his past, I could see that he was developing some very dangerous tendencies and a simmering anger that turned my feelings of sympathy into repulsion. The narrator gives him the perfect backwoods voice that wasn’t over the top but yet remains vastly different from the more cultured tones he gives to the psychiatrists. The rest of the book consists of interviews with the doc and George and letters between the doctors as they pick and prod into George’s past in order to figure him out. These two doc’s are quite the characters. The witty back and forth banter between them added some much needed humor and I found them both highly amusing despite the dark subject matter they were discussing.

George’s affliction is bizarre, to say the least, and I refuse to think about it too much because it freaks me out. I highly recommend listening to this on audio, if you can, because the narrator adds so much life to the words.

I will leave you with my favorite quote from George:

“The world would be a whole lot less trouble for everybody if most people would just not talk so much.”

And with that I am shutting up!

Comments

  1. I think I should try novellas as I dip my toes back into the horror waters. I'll have to start making a list.

    Karen @ For What It's Worth

    ReplyDelete
  2. If it freaks you out, then I need to check it out. lol
    sherry @ fundinmental

    ReplyDelete
  3. This sounds like one to try for sure! I will have to check my library for it.

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. I hope you're able to find a copy at your library, Carole.

      Delete
  4. I've heard of Sturgeon but have never read anything of his. This sounds chilling just from the way you describe it!

    ReplyDelete
  5. I tend to stick with modern horror as I never took to the Anne Rice kind of thing! I love autumn-just the time for delving into some nice horror!

    ReplyDelete
    Replies
    1. It is the best season of all! This one is more quiet horror and the vampirism is unique

      Delete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

It by Stephen King | A Retro Review

Between Naps (9)

Review: Dark Stars: New Tales of Darkest Horror edited by John F.D. Taff