Navigation

Monday, June 12, 2017

Bleeding Earth by Kaitlin Ward

Bleeding Earth by Kaitlin Ward. Recommended. Read if you like lesbian romance and environmental horrorlike



Formats: Print, digital
Publisher: Adaptive Studios
Genre: Blood & Guts, Apocalypse/Disaster, Psychological Horror, Romance
Audience: YA
Diversity: Lesbian characters, Hispanic/Latinx character
Takes Place in: New Hampshire, USA
Content Warnings: Alcohol Abuse, Bullying, Child Abuse, Child Death, Child Endangerment, Death, Forced Captivity, Gore, Homophobia, Mental Illness, Racism, Suicide, Verbal/Emotional Abuse, Violence (Highlight to view)


Between Mother Nature and human nature, disasters are inevitable. 
Lea was in a cemetery when the earth started bleeding. Within twenty-four hours, the blood made international news. All over the world, blood oozed out of the ground, even through the concrete, even in the water. Then the earth started growing hair and bones.
Lea wishes she could ignore the blood. She wishes she could spend time with her new girlfriend, Aracely, in public, if only Aracely wasn't so afraid of her father. Lea wants to be a regular teen again, but the blood has made her a prisoner in her own home. Fear for her social life turns into fear for her sanity, and Lea must save herself and her girlfriend however she can.



Happy Pride month! Here's something fun for queer horror fans, after Netflix accidently featured the Australian indie horror film, The Babadook, on their LGBT movie page, the titular creature has quickly become a Pride meme and it's wonderful. If you haven't seen the film, it's awesome, go watch it.
A tall, dark, creepy creature with long fingers and a white face is wearing a top hat with a rainbow button, rainbow suspenders, a purple feather boa, sparkly pink flamingo glasses, and a belly shirt that says “Get Ready to be Babashook.”
Artwork by Muffin Pines at http://muffinpines.tumblr.com/
For June I'll be reviewing two horror stories with queer characters, the first of which is Bleeding Earth. And oh man, did this book mess me up good. I was expecting a gory, end of the world sort of book, and instead I got a heartbreaking survival story about love, family, and humanity (yes I know how cheesy that sounds, shut up). It gave me so much anxiety, and so many emotions, and I'm still trying to process what the hell I just read. But I know it was good. It was really freaking good. And there was so much blood. Blood, and bones, and hair. I love blood. And bones. Not wads of hair though, I have my limits.

In the first caption I’m wearing a light pink dress and covered in blood. I’m clearly enjoying the blood dripping through my hair and down my shoulders because I’m smearing it on my ecstatic face while sighing “Mmmmmm, So much blood.” In the next panel I’m screaming “OH GROSS, HAIR!”  in disgust and pulling away from a wad of bloody hair I’ve just noticed.
I was going for a "Carrie at the Prom" kind of look.
Lea, the novel's protagonist and narrator, is enjoying the blossoming relationship she shares with her girlfriend, Aracely, when the blood first appears. Now, normally teen romances in dystopias and apocalyptic fiction seems tacked on and out of place. I mean, who worries about crushes when their life is on the line? But in Bleeding Earth, it works beautifully. Surrounded by chaos and despair, Lea wants to hold onto one of the few good things she has left to keep her going, because no one knows how long they have left. The girls are still in their honeymoon phase, so everything still feels wonderful and new, a sharp contrast to the reality around them. When Lea starts experiencing night terrors and hallucinations from stress and isolation, talking to her girlfriend on the phone is the only thing that helps her. And when she wants to give up, it's Aracely that keeps her going. And I just can't bring myself to begrudge her that one little bit of happiness. Who wouldn't want to spend time with someone who makes you feel safe and lets you forget your problems for a while? It gave my cold, little heart all the feels. 

The scariest thing about Bleeding Earth isn't the blood, hair, and bones seeping up from the ground. It's the feeling of isolation, uncertainty, and powerlessness. At least with zombies, aliens, and diseases there's always something you can do, a safe zone to flee to, a cure, an end in sight. But with the blood there's nowhere to escape, no way to fight back, and no stopping the blood. No one knows what's causing it, or if it will ever end. There are no answers or explanations to soothe the scared populace. And while I normally hate it when a story doesn't give me an explanation, here it actually works. It's so much more frightening when you don't know what's happening, and there's literally nothing you can do about it. Will things get better? Is this the end of the world? Did humanity piss off the earth so much it's finally rejecting them? Even at the start of the bleeding, when everyone is still doing their best to "keep calm and carry on," fear is already causing people to take desperate actions. Lea's mom obsessively measures their water and screams at her friends when they drink some, her father nails boards over all the windows so they're in complete darkness, a man attacks Aracely with a bone over a breathing mask, and some jerks at an Apocalypse party try to get an inebriated girl to drink the blood. It starts with fights over tampons in the grocery store, then looting Home Depot, to violence and riots, and it only gets worse from there. Much, MUCH worse.

Now, I know poor decision making seems to be a staple of Y/A fiction (one that annoys me to no end), but here, it makes sense. Everyone is absolutely terrified, struggling with isolation and the horror of what's happening around them, while still trying their damnedest to pretend like everything is going to be fine. And scared, stressed people do not behave in a rational manner. At various points the teenagers in the story become so desperate for normalcy and human contact they're willing to brave the blood and all its dangers just to be together. Is this a good idea? No, absolutely not. But is it understandable? Completely. Humans are social creatures, so much so that
isolation can actually be deadly. And here's the original research to back it up. I'm an introvert who prefers a quiet night at home, and even I felt stressed and nauseous when poor Lea described being trapped in her boarded up home for weeks on end, with little to no outside communication. Honestly, if I had to go through a bloodpocalypse, I probably would've snapped after a few hours indoors and gone blood hydroplaning (hemiaplaning?) in a stolen car while throwing human skulls at pedestrians. And that's speaking as someone who willingly goes for days without human contact, I can't imagine what a non-homebody extrovert would go through. So kudos to Lea for keeping it together as long as she did! If you're probably going to die anyway, it's better to die among friends and go out with a bang.


A close up of me driving a car through blood while leaning out the window. I’m holding a human skull out the window while waves of blood are being splashed up by the car. I’m dressed like one of the War Boys from Mad Max: Fury Road, with corpse pain covering my face. I gleefully shout “Oh what a day… What a lovely day!”
I showed this drawing to my wife, and now I'm not allowed to drive her car. 
While I really enjoyed Bleeding Earth, it did have some problems that got to me, and kept me from giving it the full five stars. Like Lea's dad. He learns that the mom has become unhinged, and Lea fears for their safety, but instead of going to help his wife and child, he tells his frightened daughter to get her unstable mom, slip through the looters and people willing to kill for water, and come to him. So of course a ton of horrible things happen because Lea can't get her sick mother to leave the house, and her dad is apparently too lazy to drive the 40 minutes to help her. Like, I get they need everyone they can get to keep the power going, but for fuck's sake man, you can take an hour to go rescue your wife and daughter. He's just so frustratingly blasé about the whole thing. And then there were a bunch of weird little plot points that didn't go anywhere. Like Lea's hallucinations. Ingesting the blood is discovered to cause hallucinations, night terrors, lost time, and mental breaks. Lea starts to have horrible nightmares, imagining blood in the house, but it's unclear if it's an effect from the blood or the isolation. While she does spend part of the book questioning her sanity, and it's definitely stressful and unsettling, it doesn't really go anywhere. Was she infected by the blood? Yeah, we never get an answer for that one either.

A frightened teen is on the phone with her dad. “Hey, dad? Looters keep trying to get in the house, I haven’t seen the sun in over a week, and I think mom’s gone off the deep end and she’s possibly planning to kill someone. Could you come get us?” Her dad is seen doing Sudoku in his office and tells her “That’s nice honey, but I’m just swamped at work right now, can I call you back later? Tell your mom I said “Hi”. “Dad are you even listening!? Screw your work and get your ass back here!”
Hey, Sudoku IS work!
The lack of explanations will be a major turn off for a lot of readers, and I can understand that. But honestly, I didn't feel like it was needed, because that really isn't the point of the story. This isn't a sci-fi novel with an omniscient narrator about a world-wide disaster. This is Lea's story. It's about her fears, her loneliness, her confusion, and her crush on Aracely. She's terrified and frustrated because she doesn't know what will happen, her parents can't reassure her, and she just wants to be able to take comfort in something. It's a sweet, sad story of survival, isolation, and just trying to enjoy a simple teen crush in a world that's gone to hell

No comments:

Post a Comment