Series: Book 1 in the Cirque Du Freak series
Rating: Not rated
Tags: Horror, Action & Adventure, Fiction
Summary
Anyone who loves the humorous but hair-raising horror in
R.L. Stine's Goosebumps series will devour British author
Darren Shan's first novel with equal zeal. Some books are born
with a surrounding buzz; this one even has Harry Potter creator
J.K. Rowling's stamp of approval: "Fast-paced and compelling,
full of satisfying macabre touches," she writes. Warner
Brothers will be making it into a movie, and the rest of the
series is already in the works. Given all that, you'd expect a
tour de force! Really, though, Cirque Du Freak is a thrill ride
that will keep even the most reluctant readers turning pages,
but will never take its place in the literary canon. Darren
Shan, author and narrator, sets the book up as a true story,
warning readers: "Real life's nasty. It's cruel.... Evil often
wins." Indeed, evil begins to win when Darren and his buddies
find a flier for "Cirque Du Freak," a traveling freak show
promising performances by the snake-boy, the wolf-man, and
Larten Crepsley and his giant spider, Madame Octa. Darren and
his friend Steve wouldn't miss it for the world. So, Saturday
night they sneak out to the old theater, tall and dark, with
broken windows. "Every act you see tonight is real," croaks Mr.
Tall. "Each performer is unique. And none are harmless." That's
for sure. (A werewolf bites off the hand of someone in the
audience, for instance.) Things grow very serious for the two
boys when Steve not only recognizes Mr. Crepsley as a famous
vampire, but professes his true desire to join him! To make
matters worse, the spider-obsessed Darren goes back to the old
theater to steal Madame Octa so he can teach her tricks in his
room. (He does, with mixed results.) The plot further
coagulates as Darren is faced with some terrible decisions
about what to do to save his bloodthirsty friend Steve. Readers
may be too enthralled to notice some clumsy editing (the
aforementioned bitten-off hand is later referred to as an arm,
Darren stops dead in his tracks when he's already stopped,
etc.). They may also not notice that the boys constantly use
adult-sounding expressions like "his breath stank to the high
heavens," though the book is clearly set in the 21st century.
If this book gets under your kids' skin (and it probably will),
they're in luck--we haven't heard the last of the Saga of
Darren Shan. (Ages 10 and older, not for the faint of heart)
--Karin Snelson