Skip to content
Irrational Fears (HB) *OP poster

Irrational Fears (HB) *OP

Jack Lowry, a professor trying to overcome alcoholism for the third time, falls in love with Kerry Beckett, a fellow alcholic, but when she is kidnapped by Dorian Greenway, the leader of an extreme recovery group, The Clear, Jack must enter the cult's monster-filled coven to rescue her

From Publishers Weekly

Former literature professor Jack Lowry has been in Hurley Detox before?twice before. But the power of positive thinking isn't for everyone, and after five months of sobriety Jack is back for another dreary round of group therapy led by counselor Wesley Parks, a man with the "emotional resources of a mollusk." Worse yet, Jack finds himself attracted to fellow patient Kerry Beckett and a hopelessly one-sided relationship he knows is doomed from the start. But the vicissitudes of recovery are nothing compared to the threat to life and sanity presented by The Clear, a local cult whose leader claims that all drunks are progeny of an ancient alien tribe and that they must prepare for cosmic battle during the upcoming Unraveling. At first, The Clear seems more nuisance than danger. Then people start disappearing. Hinkle, a fellow patient, manages to escape the cult's clutches, only to meet a nasty end, swallowed head-first by a malevolent toilet?and that's only the beginning. As in his previous novels (Zod Wallop; Resume with Monsters), Spencer follows characters already beleaguered by the mundane world as they reluctantly make a stand against vast supernatural forces. Black humor lightens the darkness, from the Lovecraftian overtones of an AA meeting where the usual slogans are replaced with "One Day at a Zigmuth" and "But for the Grace of Azathoth," to the Whole Addiction Expo, a twisted send-up of the New Age recovery movement. Those who prize droll humor and vivid characters along with supernatural fireworks will love this finely crafted fantasy. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Ex-professor Jack Lowry's latest visit to an alcoholic rehabilitation hospital takes a decidedly bizarre turn when a cult called The Clear introduces a new (and monstrous) dimension to the process of recovery. The author of Zod Wallop (LJ 10/15/95) mixes social satire and over-the-top horror in a caustic, darkly humorous tale of one man's war against both real and imaginary demons. Spencer's characteristic eccentricity (reminiscent of Philip K. Dick and Ken Kesey) illuminates his latest novel and explores the fine line between madness and sanity. A good choice for most fantasy or general fiction collections.Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Kirkus Reviews

An AA horror story that turns the Twelve Steps upside downand wallows in sluggish language out of H.P. Lovecraftby the author of, among others, Zod Wallop (1995). Spencers tale, though amusing, lacks the satirical bite that Twelve Steppers deserve. Still, the author builds quite a gothic tale from his villain's demented discourse about AA as both a gift and a curse. Jack Lowry, an American literature professor now on his third rehab, finds himself falling for fellow drunk Kerry Beckett, an 18-year-old half his age. When Jack enters Hurley Memorial detox in Alexandria, Virginia, and is driven with a crew of drunks to a nearby church for an AA meeting, hes met outside the church with demonstrators of a rival recovery group, called The Clear, which views AA as an abomination: its leaflets declare YOU ARE IN HELL and announce that The Unraveling is at hand. Candy-popping counselor Wesley Parks departs for a newer rehab, gets sidetracked into The Clear, and when he returns sits engrossed in deep conversation with his daily Jell-O. Then Kerry is kidnaped by Dorian Greenway, head guru of The Clear, who lives with his recovery coven in a hell-house whose carpets crawl with virtual snakes. Dorian professes rich ideas about alcoholismits an ancient curse spread by Lovecraftian monsters, one of which lives in the swimming pool in Dorians basement and eats up AAs in a bloodspray. When Jack and fellow recovering alkie Ed Tilman sneak into the hell-manse to find Kerry, they come upon naked Clear recruits gathered about the swimming pool, with a bare Kerry apparently encased in a block of ice. And that's just for starters, before the death machines show up. The best scene comes early, with a monstrous toilet that swallows a drunk. -- Copyright ©1998, Kirkus Associates, LP. All rights reserved.

Find it on

Amazon

Reviews

No videos available yet.

News

No news articles linked to this title yet.

Bottom star pattern decoration

Irrational Fears (HB) *OP Ratings

Overall

Overall rating of the media

0.0 0 ratings

Atmosphere

How immersive and tense is the atmosphere

0.0 0 ratings

Gore

Level and quality of gore/violence

0.0 0 ratings

Story

Quality of the storyline and plot

0.0 0 ratings

Writing

Quality of the written content

0.0 0 ratings

Character Development

Depth and growth of characters

0.0 0 ratings

Pacing

Flow and timing of the narrative

0.0 0 ratings