Weekly Reader: The Dark Chorus by Ashley Meggitt; Dark Hypnotic Horror About A Mentally Disturbed Man With Soul Stealing Powers
By Julie Sara Porter
Bookworm Reviews
Spoilers: Ashley Meggitt's The Dark Chorus is a disturbing supernatural novel about a protagonist with an almost hypnotic power of stealing and capturing souls from the body.
The Narrator is a seriously troubled young man who spent most of his life in children's homes and psychiatric wards. His mother just died and he knows because as she died, he took her soul and put it into what he calls, The Dark Chorus, the souls that he collected and he carries with him. He is haunted by this ability, whether he does it out of malice, self-defense, or accidentally.
He is caught in the act of killing a woman during a ritual and he is judged to be mentally insane. His psychiatrist, Dr. Rhodes tries to find out the root of his strange story. The Narrator makes a pair of new friends, Makka and Vee. It isn't long before the trio are on the run with law enforcement and psychiatric services following close behind.
The book begins terrifyingly and pretty much stays that way. The Narrator's opening ritual is nightmarish as the souls wail at him in a chorus that sounds like all of Hell has a sound system just for The Narrator. His ritual ends up depriving his mother of her memories and identity to the point where she doesn't recognize him. It gets worse when he assaults a family friend, Mrs. Johnson, a woman that he insists wanted to die, to exchange her soul for his mother's. It's a mesmerizing and eerie ritual that sets the stage for the rest of the book.
While the Narrator has this unique power, he is not invincible. In fact, he is often susceptible to other character's manipulations and desires. He becomes aware of this as he hides with Makka and Vee. His two friends are frightened of him but are also motivated by their own avarice, rage, and need for violence against those who have wronged them. The more that they drag their new friend into hiding with suspicious allies and family members, the more they fuel his connection to the Dark Chorus and his souls. Their desires for an end to their pain only adds to the Narrator's.
While Makka and Vee could be considered The Narrator's friends, they are also interested in their own personal gain. The only one who is genuinely concerned for him is Dr. Rhodes. As they search for the boy, Rhodes doubts his elaborate story. At first Rhodes plays on one of my favorite tropes: whether what is happening is real or just part of Insanity. After all, The Narrator could have imagined the whole ritual in the beginning and Makka and Vee could be playing along with The Narrator's fantasies for their own means.
However, that changes once Rhodes starts peering into The Narrator's past and finds out about his connections to a mysterious cult. The Narrator's back story serves as an explanation for the strange events and makes him even more isolated because of decisions that were not of his own doing.
His souls can't connect him to anyone, even himself. This is what Dr. Rhodes connects with him. She is the only person who truly cares for and wants to try to understand him. She wants to see beyond his ability to the real suffering person inside.
The Dark Chorus gives us a unique power and the suffering that a person who has it can go through. They can feel used, misunderstood, discredited, and alone: just drifting along like a soul without a body.
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