Available Dark by Elizabeth Hand
It’s been a few months since the events of Generation Loss, and Cass Neary, strapped for cash, has made a big mistake. In that previous book, she took pictures of someone’s death but told the police she wasn’t at the scene. She never meant to publish any of the photos. Whoops. So, with the police and the dead person’s son asking awkward questions, and Cass in need of money again, it seems like a great time to take a gig that will absent her from the country for a while.
Available Dark (2012) takes Cass to Helsinki, where she is tasked with examining a series of gory photographs and verifying that they are authentic and that the series is complete. The pictures show people killed in ways that evoke a group of spirits called the Yuleboys, and it’s pretty clear that if the photographer wasn’t the killer, he was at least a witness to the crimes. Cass does the job and then skips town for a side trip to Iceland, where she hopes to find a long-ago sweetheart — but soon learns that someone is willing to kill over the Yuleboys photos, and that the danger may have followed her to Reykjavik.
Like Generation Loss, Available Dark isn’t exactly fantasy, but falls into the “of interest to fantasy fans” category. It involves mythology, and people who sincerely believe in it, but the gods don’t actually show up. Hand takes us on a vividly described trip through bleak, icy landscapes and the weird world of pagan black metal. The sense of menace is palpable, and one scene in which Cass battles the elements is truly harrowing. There’s also a great moment at the climax when several Chekhov’s guns and Cass’s unusual skill set come together in a really clever way.
In hindsight, I felt like the book could have been longer, with a bit more exposition. The connections between some of the mythological elements seemed a little tenuous. I wanted to know more about who the Yuleboys were, and how they connected to the Odin cult, and what the Yuleboy-themed ritual murders were supposed to accomplish. There’s enough information for the central mystery to make sense, but I do love Hand’s mythological deep-dives, and wished for more of one here.
Still, Available Dark is a suspenseful, gory thriller that delivers chills in more than one sense of the word. Read it around the winter solstice for a very un-hygge holiday treat.
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