Title: Tales from Monarch Bay – First Memories
Author: J.M. Acosta
Publisher: Self-Published
Publication Date: April 12, 2021
Genres: Fantasy, (mild) Horror, Paranormal, Contemporary
Length: 55 pages
Source: I received a free copy from the author.
Rating: 3 Stars
Blurb:
All it took for Rien was to touch his old Rio player and a sudden rush of memories from High School came flooding back. To when he first moved to Monarch Bay and met The Keeper. When he had to stop the faceless man and save the world from an ancient threat. But are these really memories he wants to relive?
Review:
Content Warning: Vomiting and a little blood. I will not discuss them in my review.
Everything in life has its own rhythm if you pay enough attention to it.
One of the biggest strengths of this novella in my opinion had to do with the way it explored old, half-forgotten memories. I think that just about all of us have had the experience of discovering such a memory after being exposed to something that reminds of us of the past. I was fascinated by how the narrator reacted to everything his mind dredged up, whether they were of happy times or terrible ones. It can be quite a jarring experience, and that aspect of it was captured just as nicely as the many other emotions the narrator felt as he relived that portion of his teenage years.
I had trouble keeping track of the plot and the world building. Some of their most important moments were described so rapidly and in such little detail that I wasn’t always sure what was happening. This was a technique that made sense in the beginning when Rien first discovered the MP3 player and had no idea what it was capable of doing, but I wasn’t quite sure why it was used later on once the stakes were higher. As much as I would have loved to give this a higher rating, I simply couldn’t do it due to these issues.
Beaches are such liminal spaces that it made perfect sense for so much of this tale to happen on and near them. It was interesting to take note of all of the connections the author made between the existence of ordinary beaches in our world and the otherworldly places they described that were every bit as transitory and filled with uncertainty. What made this portion of the storyline even better was how it was even more deeply explored in the ending, but that’s all I can say about that topic. If you want to learn more, you’ll simply have to go read it for yourself.
Tales from Monarch Bay – First Memories was a thought-provoking read.
Nice review, Lydia. It sounds a bit confusing, and as I’m easily confused, this one might not be for me.
Thank you!
And good for you for knowing your limits. 🙂