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Slow Funeral

4.4 out of 5 stars (7)
3.5 on Goodreads
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Book details

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Book overview

Running away from Bracken County and its corrupt magical practices after her parents are killed, Maude Fuller attempts to deny her witch destiny, until her beloved grandmother's impending death summons Maude back home. Reprint.

From Publishers Weekly

Ore ( The Illegal Rebirth of Billy the Kid ) turns from SF to contemporary fantasy in this rambling novel about witchcraft in the hills of western Virginia. Maude Fuller is a child of Bracken County witches who's been avoiding her spooky kin by living on welfare in California, but when she feels the mental call of her dying grandmother Partridge, she reluctantly heads East to tend the old woman. Following Maude--and complicating her eventual showdown with her magic-wielding relatives--are Doug Sanderheim, an engineer Maude picked up in a bar, and the Reverend Julian Springer, a maniacal preacher. Maude must protect Partridge from her creepy Aunt Betty, who has dire plans for the dying woman's soul, and must stop her Uncle Luke from using Doug as a human sacrifice. Along with several eerie moments, Ore offers a colorful depiction of Appalachian life and culture. But the novel lacks focus and momentum; in fact, so little happens in the first half that readers may well lose interest before the central conflict becomes apparent.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Library Journal

Despite her best intentions, Maude Fuller returns from her haven in California to her family home in Bracken County, Virginia. There she grudgingly accepts the heritage of her witch blood to fight a battle against the forces of evil in a land riddled with ancient magic. The author of Becoming Alien (Tor Bks., 1989) offers a dark and foreboding look at rural magic, depicted here as universally petty and vindictive. Although Ore is a graceful writer who captures many aspects of small town insularity, her characters are unsympathetic and her vision disturbing.
Copyright 1994 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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Top reviews from the United States

5.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Very Unusual
Reviewed in the United States on November 26, 2013
This novel is not the standard science fiction/fantasy pulp. Which is part of why I like it so much. I also found it to be very creepy in ways that reminded me of Dan Simmons. And then there is the underlying question of how does one deal with a mother who has a penchant... See more
This novel is not the standard science fiction/fantasy pulp. Which is part of why I like it so much. I also found it to be very creepy in ways that reminded me of Dan Simmons. And then there is the underlying question of how does one deal with a mother who has a penchant for evil? Ore's prose is a delight to digest. My disappointment with many of her other books is their shortness. This book does not have that issue, making it a very good read.
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4.0 out of 5 starsVerified Purchase
Not escapist fantasy
Reviewed in the United States on October 21, 2007
Urban fantasy is hot now - this novel is a good example of dark RURAL fantasy. Ore perfectly renders the suffocating atmosphere of a backwards southern county. She uses the fantasy elements in the story, the inbred magical families indebted to their "entities", to... See more
Urban fantasy is hot now - this novel is a good example of dark RURAL fantasy. Ore perfectly renders the suffocating atmosphere of a backwards southern county. She uses the fantasy elements in the story, the inbred magical families indebted to their "entities", to illustrate the way a few old families run things in little towns all over the south.

If you love fantasy, you'll be fascinated by the way Ore turns the genre sideways. But if you are like me, an escapee from a little southern town, this book will echo in your thoughts for a long while.
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5.0 out of 5 stars
Appalachian Witchcraft meets Apocalyptic End Times with a nod to Philip K Dick
Reviewed in the United States on January 2, 2023
There’s almost nothing out there like this contemporary fantasy book as far as its bare-knuckle depiction of ancient rural witchcraft and the pull it exerts over those raised in it and seeking to leave. It is very well-written, even mesmerizing in some places, but... See more
There’s almost nothing out there like this contemporary fantasy book as far as its bare-knuckle depiction of ancient rural witchcraft and the pull it exerts over those raised in it and seeking to leave. It is very well-written, even mesmerizing in some places, but deliberately raw, as if Ore seeks to rip open your soul the way the ragged Appalachian landscape of West Virginia carves its inhabitants from the inside out.

“People feared their passions in Bracken County. Passions called up old entities furious that their worship had been neglected.”

I have no background with this kind of generational occult ancestry, but someone very near and dear to me did, and he said it was eerily like reading about his own childhood in rural Maryland through a thinly disguised fantasy veneer. I won’t give away the plot, but the chapter where a magician named Follette controls an entire miniature research facility from the back of his pick-up is indelibly etched in my brain.

“You can trap anyone who doesn’t understand what his principles should be,” Follette said.

I highly recommend this but only if you read it with an open mind and refuse to view it through the typical commercialized mass-market lens of science fiction, contemporary fantasy, and the occult. Read it on its own merits, respecting its odd, meticulous logic. You will open a door into a world of ancient, witchy power grabs so startling and riveting that at the end you may even want to flee like the protagonist to the big city where things are "logic-shaped enough to fight will-shaping."
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