The Montauk Monster
By Hunter Shea
2014 Pinnacle Books
Paperback, 347 pages
I admit it. I’m stuck-up. I don’t
give new things a chance. Any horror novel written after 1990 surely sucks. But
while perusing the books at Savers recently, this one caught my eye. Despite
being newer (2014) and twice as thick as I like to read, the back cover hype
made me give it a chance. A gory monster book for $3; it was worth a shot.
Remember when the mangy, hairless
raccoon carcass washed up in Montauk, NY and a new cryptozoological hero was
born? Well, Shea took that sensational (if fleeting) story and fleshed it out
as reality and the results are phenomenal. Indescribable monsters are flooding
into Long Island and shredding everyone in sight. Where do they come from and
how do you stop them?
Shea gets it. He knows how to write
a nature-strikes-back/ bloody monster story and this one is right up there with
the best of this beloved genre. All of my favorite tropes are present:
introducing characters that are mere monster fodder, gratuitous gore and sex,
snarling, unstoppable monsters and the death of characters that you thought
would live. One welcome update to the model that I love so much is an
ass-kicking, disabled woman; someone that Guy N. Smith would never have had the
presence of mind include in a story.
After enjoying this one as much as I did, I looked up Shea’s other titles and it seems that the cryptozoology monsters are his thing. I look forward to reading more of his work, especially his Skunk Ape novel, which clocks in at well under 200 pages. The Montauk Monster runs a bit long because plenty of explanation is needed for the beasts’ existence, but it still moves quickly, and I couldn’t be happier with my $3 purchase.
This review originally appeared in Midnight Magazine #8, July 2021.
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