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11 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Love?, December 28, 2002
Ghost promises to kill Shella's father. He tells her this. It is so romantic you weep when you read it. Vachss writes crisp. So sharp it cuts your mind. He creates characters with such depth they are bottomless. They are bottomless because the depths of human depravity is bottomless. You like Ghost by the end of the book. Hell, you like him at the beginning. To label him an antihero belittles his character, just as labeling him a murderer belittles his actions. It would be accurate but not accurate. He does kill. A lot. But there is no emotion in it. He is like a weapon. Neither truly good nor truly evil. Simply there. Waiting to have its sights locked and its trigger pulled. But Ghost, John, whatever his name, doesn't need anyone to justify his actions. He doesn't care about those things. All he cares about is Shella. He will go to hells without number to find her if necessary. And it is necessary. I don't know if one could call what he feels for Shella love. I don't know what it is. Love doesn't exist where he and Shella are. It never did and never will. But the closest word that describes it is love. Does love exist in hell? You'd have to ask Ghost. Perhaps that is what Vachss wants to tell a story about. Maybe he wants to show us what true love is like in true hell.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Well written story about a bleak world., November 24, 2004
Vachss writing is spare and brutally to the point (no Anne Rice syndrome here). The world he writes about is bleak, devasting and brutal. In Shella he delves into the world of a young boy abandoned at places where he lived with fear and the constant threat of abuse and grew up to be a cold-hearted, brutal killer for hire who is known as Ghost. Only Shella, a street toughened dancer, ever saw beneath the hard shell. They are separated when Ghost is thrown in jail and now that he's out his one goal is to find Shella. This is an interesting look into the life of a killer. How cold-heartedly it happens out of necessity and survival. The book is bleak (have I said that already?) and disturbing. This was a difficult to put down book but it's not one I'd like to revisit due its complete sense of despair.
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6 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Beyond Mans Heart of Darkness, July 28, 1997
By A Customer
Shella was the first novel by Andrew Vachss I read. Later I learned he was a lawyer and a champion of abused children, when I was seeking the source of the intense hold this book held over me. Mr. Vachss writes with the intensity of a sledge hammer through a plate glass window. He dares you to turn away from the horrors of life that somewhere, deep past the place where nightmares fear to tread, you always knew were there. In his characters Ghost and Shella, we see the victims of an evil polite society many times refuses to believe exists violently transformed into a shadow of the evil which created them. If this is all there was, we'd have the makings of any Hollywood action film. But what kept me reading was, at the core of his main characters, there lies a frail vestige of humanity. Ghost's search for his old partner seems only a damaged attempt to re-establish the only semblance of a family he ever had, and he goes about it the only way he knows how. I strongly recommend Shella to anyone interested in crime fiction, mystery novels, or horror, as it has elements of each, with this admonition: after you've read it, nothing will seem the same again
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