Red Rabbit by Alex Grecian dark fantasy book reviewsRed Rabbit by Alex Grecian dark fantasy book reviewsRed Rabbit by Alex Grecian

2023’s Red Rabbit, by Alex Grecian, is a solid entry in a category of speculative fiction I call fantastical Americana. Set in the American Midwest a few years after the Civil War, the book starts when some men in a town in Burden County, Kansas, put a bounty on the head of the local witch. This brings all kinds of killers into the county. Meanwhile, farther south, two former union soldiers partner up with Old Tom, self-proclaimed witch-master, and the mute child, Rabbit, who travels with him. As they head up to Kansas, they meet Rose Nettles Mullins, newly widowed, who decides to travel with them. Joe, Rose’s dead husband, had his spirit shaken lose from his body, and decides to go along to make sure Rose is all right. Only one of the party can see him, and only at certain times.

Moses Burke, one of the two soldiers, is a Black man who was trained as a medic during the war. He and Ned Hemingway aren’t interested in killing a witch, but the trip sounds interesting. Besides, Old Tom insists he’s already killed the witch via magic. He’s only going north to collect his earnings.

Old Tom is wrong on a few counts. He hasn’t killed the witch, Sadie Grace, who is preparing to face many men who plan to kill her. One is Duff Duncan, a cowhand from a nearby ranch, who has persuaded himself that Sadie let his fiancé die. More troubling is Ubel Crane, a scholar as well as a witch-hunter, who has written several successful novels about killing witches and demons. Sadie isn’t worried about them or even the sadistic trio of former Confederate soldiers who show up later—her real concern is the force she feels emanating from the south, following a strange group of six, or maybe seven, headed her way.

Alex Grecian

Alex Grecian

The novel is picaresque. On their trek, Moses, Ned and the others encounter deadly magics right and left; a suicide forest; a town of cannibals, and a deserted ranch taken over by a demon and its human servant, just to name a few. The risks grow the closer they get to Burden County. Along the way, we learn more about each of the members of this strange “posse,” which grows when another member joins their crew. Several of them remain mysteries to us, and no one is more mysterious than Rabbit.

We discover that Sadie is not as evil as the local men have claimed. She’s been made a scapegoat by men who can’t acknowledge their own greed, fear or hypocrisy. At the other end of the continuum, it becomes less and less likely that Rabbit is an innocent, ordinary child.

The tone and the specifics of the book feel like folklore; this could be some “tall tale” out of the Ozarks. The book is filled with adventure, chills and thrills, and plenty of gore. There are ambushes and gunfights; there are demonic monsters and human ones. Despite the amount of death and dismemberment, there is a distance to the descriptions and the emotional tone that makes this book almost brisk rather than horrifying. The fact that death, for many, is only an inconvenience adds to that gentle distance. I was a bit startled at the end of the book when I added up how many people were dead. (To be fair, several of them were dead before the story started. There are a lot of ghosts.)

Grecian also blends the grotesque with the humorous here to good effect. In one scene a demon sets a dead, headless body dancing around, just for entertainment. Then he forgets about it, and is angry when it bumps into him. That was funny.

The world-building, the deadpan humor, the landscape and the magic all add up to an enjoyable read. I wanted to know what would happen next, but I really didn’t want the book to end.

The two books are nothing alike in plot or tone, but I’m left with the feeling that the world of Alix E. Harrow’s The Once and Future Witches is very close to Grecian’s world, and that’s a compliment to Grecian. If you liked the Harrow book and also like “weird west,” you owe it to yourself to give this one a try.

Published in 2023. A ragtag posse must hunt down a witch through a wild west beset by demons and ghosts―where death is always just around the bend―in this new supernatural horror by bestselling author Alex Grecian. Sadie Grace is wanted for witchcraft, dead (or alive). And every hired gun in Kansas is out to collect the bounty on her head, including bona fide witch hunter Old Tom and his mysterious, mute ward, Rabbit. On the road to Burden County, they’re joined by two vagabond cowboys with a strong sense of adventure – but no sense of purpose – and a recently widowed schoolteacher with nothing left to lose. As their posse grows, so too does the danger. Racing along the drought-stricken plains in a stolen red stagecoach, they encounter monsters more wicked than witches lurking along the dusty trail. But the crew is determined to get that bounty, or die trying. Written with the devilish cadence of Stephen Graham Jones and the pulse-pounding brutality of Nick Cutter, Red Rabbit is an epic adventure of luck and misfortune.

Author

  • Marion Deeds

    Marion Deeds, with us since March, 2011, is the author of the fantasy novella ALUMINUM LEAVES. Her short fiction has appeared in the anthologies BEYOND THE STARS, THE WAND THAT ROCKS THE CRADLE, STRANGE CALIFORNIA, and in Podcastle, The Noyo River Review, Daily Science Fiction and Flash Fiction Online. She’s retired from 35 years in county government, and spends some of her free time volunteering at a second-hand bookstore in her home town.

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