Review: Golem by P.D. Alleva

Review: Golem by P.D. Alleva

Golem by PD Alleva
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Description (from Amazon.com)

On November 1, 1951, war hero John Ashton was promoted to detective. His first assignment: find the district attorney’s missing daughter. But his only lead is Alena Francon, a high society sculptor and socialite committed to Bellevue’s psychiatric facility. 

Alena has a story for the new detective. A story so outlandish John Ashton refuses to heed the warning. Alena admits to incarnating Golem, a demonic force, into her statue. A devil so profound he’s infiltrated every part of New York’s infrastructure. Even worse, he uses children to serve as bodily hosts for his demonic army, unleashing a horde of devils into our world. 

When Alena’s confidant, Annette Flemming, confirms the existence of Golem, John is sent on a collision course where fate and destiny spiral into peril, and the future of the human race hangs in the balance. 

The Devil Is In The Details!

Fans of The Silence of the Lambs, Clive Barker, John Connolly, old Stephen King, and Anne Rice will be fascinated by this edge of your seat psychological horror thriller with a story that rips out the heart of humanity and throws it on a slab to be feasted on. 


5 stars

My Thoughts

Horror is not horror unless it is psychological. I’ve found many horror novels that are nothing more than gore dressed up with one-dimensional characters. I have–since I started reading horror–looked for those books which have dynamic characters, both protagonist and antagonist. There haven’t been many, of late. Nothing is black and white, and the devil is in the details.

Golem by P.D. Alleva is one such book that brought me back to those days where getting into a book was diving into the psychology of the characters and, by extension, myself. It starts off with a mystery and as the pages unfold, so too does the plot. High society artist Alena suffers a mental collapse which leads her to set fire to her family’s hotel. A rookie detective complete with a nice fedora, is given the assignment of finding the missing daughter of a District Attorney.

These two story lines merge, and soon John, our detective, doesn’t know if the story Alena told him has any bit of truth in it. Still, he persists, haunted by Alena’s tale of the titular character. That character, Golem, is himself a well-rounded one. He could have been nothing more than evil, a copy of a million other villains out there, but I got the sense that Alleva wanted to give him more depth.

I recommend that fans of horror—especially psychological horror—pick up Golem by P.D Alleva. It is a riveting book without a dull moment. There is gore, sex, and violence, but that’s not all the book is. It is an examination of what brings people to madness and what lengths they will go to in order to free themselves from their personal demons. There is allegory in this book, and I’m sure fans of classic horror will enjoy it as much as I did.

Available at Amazon: https://www.amazon.com/Golem-PD-Alleva-ebook/dp/B09CV5823C/


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