Sunday, December 18, 2022

Someone at the Door (1994)

By: Richie Tankersley Cusick

Genre: Young Adult Horror/Thriller

Hannah Stuart is having a rough day. She finally got up the nerve to break up with her abusive boyfriend of six months and she just wants to get home and be done with the day. Unfortunately there is a blizzard rolling in and Hannah’s parents are out of town, leaving her in charge of her younger sister Meg. As the storm hits and the night wears on, Hannah’s stress levels are on the rise. Between threatening phone calls from her ex, anxiety about keeping warm should they lose power, and a news report about an escaped killer on the loose, Hannah fears it’s going to be difficult to get through. On top of this, at 2:00 AM, two injured young men appear at their door, begging for help. The girls reluctantly let them in, but as the storm stretches over the next few days, strange things begin to happen – food disappearing along with the axe from the woodpile, creepy pranks of a violent nature, and who the hell built that giant snowman in the front yard? Is it Hannah’s enraged ex boyfriend looking to terrorize her? Is it the escaped killer? Or is one or both of the injured young men the girls have allowed in their home not what they seem?

I originally read this novel approximately nineteen years ago and oddly felt the urge to reread it recently. 

It’s me, hi, I’m the old fart, it’s me

It must be the winter setting that set this off, but encouragement from fellow Goodreads user and author, Nenia Campbell, pushed me to pick it up again. It’s fitting that I wound up finishing this reread of a novel about two girls isolated in a blizzard while in the middle of one myself. I remembered enjoying this story as a fourteen-year-old and hoped it held up, despite forgetting most details. For the most part, it did.

One thing I didn’t remember was what a cranky jerk Hannah is. On the one hand, I understand, I get snippy and easily irritated when I’m anxious too, and she is under a lot of stress. I get it, and I get that she’s only seventeen so her emotions aren’t going to be regulated as well as a fully developed adult’s. However, she’s quick to verbally hit Meg where it hurts and physically attempt to hit Jonathon and Lance when they say things that upset her. (Ninety-five percent of the time this leads to the guy pinning her down … maybe she just has a kink for being manhandled by attractive men. Understandable, but girl, use your words!) 

Then there’s the fact that, for about eighty percent of the novel she refuses to believe her ex could be behind any of the strange goings-on. (Babe, he literally threatened to kill you and could have been the only one to leave that disgusting ‘gift’ in your car.) When she finds his abandoned car and gets upset that he might be injured and/or lost in the snow, I was like, “Oh, honey…” When she gets pissed that the others care more about finding the dog than making sure her piece of shit ex isn’t in danger, I wanted to smack her upside the head myself. If I had to choose between helping the family dog that loves everyone and the ex that threatened to murder me, that bastard can freeze to death, I’m choosing the innocent dog. If my ex is out there we'll find his body in the spring. 

The abusive ex as I cuddle up with the dog inside. 

Meg is all bleeding heart and naiveté. I do get why Hannah gets annoyed with her, the girl is a bit dramatic and trusts too easily. (Someone seriously needs to educate this girl on the fact that a man being attractive doesn’t prevent him from being a murderer before she becomes a victim of the next Ted Bundy.) She’s quick to be moved to tears or fright. However, she is also driven to help people, whether it’s letting Hannah sleep and making her dinner after a rough day, counseling her on how her ex was a worthless piece of shit anyway, breaking the house rules and letting the family dog in the house (I seriously despise people who make their dogs live outside), or aiding in taking care of the injured men they’ve taken in. She’s immature in some aspects, but she’s a good kid.

This brings us to the injured parties in question, Jonathon and Lance. They are a little off-putting right from the start, ready to break the door down if the girls didn’t provide them shelter. Their relationship with the girls varies throughout the story, with Meg innocently trusting them for the most part and Hannah being cautiously suspicious.

Jonathon is the more personable of the two – kind, good-humored despite his severe leg injury, gentle yet stubborn, almost to the point of self-sacrificing martyrdom. His fair hair and big blue eyes seem to lure Hannah in, and the two do seem to have great chemistry, even kissing a few times. They could possibly have a healthy relationship, if he doesn’t turn out to be a murderer, and she gets her anger under control and stops trying to hit people. (Although maybe that’s foreplay for them … their first kiss does happen after she takes a swing at him and he’s pinning her arms between their bodies.)

He does appear to be the more trustworthy of the duo, but doesn’t come off as entirely innocent either. He’s very shifty when it comes to personal details and does say creepy things on occasion, often reminding Hannah of just how isolated she and Meg are.

“ ' – your parents.’ Jonathon’s voice sounded softly in her ear, and Hannah whirled with a gasp.
“’What did you say?’
“She hadn’t heard him leave the corner, hadn’t even heard him cross the hall. Now his blue eyes gazed into hers, and as he leaned forward, one sleeve lightly touched her arm.
“ 'Your parents,’ he spoke again. ‘Don’t you think you should wake them up?’
“It comes to her then, in a slow, chilling realization, that he knew her parents weren’t here – that he knew she and Meg were completely alone – that somehow, somehow he knew – " (p. 34)

“ 'As soon as the snow lets up. The road crews will be out here early, you know … to make sure we’re all right.’ …
“ 'As isolated as you are?’ he murmured. ‘I don’t think so.’” (p. 37)

“You girls are stranded out here … It just wouldn’t be right to leave you two alone.” (p. 65)

“ '[My boyfriend] is coming over today,’ Hannah repeated emphatically. ‘And bringing some of his friends. They’re all football players, and my boyfriend’s extremely jealous.’ …
“ 'Like the road crews? Look, Hannah, your boyfriend won’t be coming today. You know it, and I know it. So why keep playing games?’" (p. 80)

This scene was playing in my head while reading the last exchange.

Lance is much more suspicious from the start. When the guys first arrive at the house, Hannah doesn’t have much interaction with him due to his head injury. It’s later that evening when he wakes up that they have their first encounter, where he puts her in a stranglehold from behind. Solid start to whatever relationship will occur between you two, bro. Everything about him is darker than Jonathon, from his shoulder-length hair, to his broody and intimidating demeanor, to the willingness to get physical and the weird things he says.

He takes a particular interest in the story of the escaped killer as Meg relays what she saw on the news and he’s the one that decides he and Jonathon need to stay and protect them. The fact that he does seem to take this role seriously works in his favor, especially when it comes to Meg. With Hannah, he gets sick of her shit pretty quickly, and honestly, between her attitude, the amount of times she runs off into the storm, and the amount of times she tries to hit him, I don’t entirely blame him. I don’t entirely blame her either though, because I feel like he enjoys being a bit of a jerk to her.

“She ran for the hall, jumping back with a scream as she collided with Lance in the doorway.
“ 'Looking for your sister?’ he asked, and Hannah froze, her heart leaping into her throat.
“ 'Where is she?’ Hannah demanded. ‘Where’s Meg?’ She tried to step around him, but he moved sideways at the same time. To her fury, she found herself trapped between Lance and the wall.
“Hannah looked up at him, fighting back panic …
“ 'If you don’t let me go,’ Hannah threatened, ‘I’ll –'
“ 'No one’s holding you,’ Lance said. He lifted his arms at his sides, and Hannah suddenly realized that he’d backed away. Flushing angrily, she shoved past him and ran up to her room.” (p. 74-75)

“… she tried again, hating herself for being flustered, hating him even more for knowing it. ‘Get off of me,’ she said sharply.
“Lance seemed to consider this a moment, looking down at her with a relentless stare. Hannah felt her breath quickening – her heart racing. Once more she tried to move, once more she stopped, all too aware of his body on hers. Then she saw one corner of his mouth curl in a sardonic smile.
“'You know …” Lance murmured, 'if I wasn’t so sure what an in-control person you are … I’d swear you were blushing.’
“ 'Let me go!’ Hannah screamed, and tried to swing at him.
“Without warning, he pinned her hands to the ground. He was so incredibly strong that Hannah felt a surge of panic go through her …” (p. 130-131)

One thing both men have in common is the offense they take to the girls, particularly Hannah, suspecting one of them might be the escaped killer. Um, guys, they are two teenage girls, stranded in the middle of nowhere during a seemingly endless blizzard, who have heard news reports about an escaped murderer headed their way and they have no idea who either of you are.

“’Look, I understand why you’re so nervous about us being here, but what do I have to do to convince you we’re not going to tie you up, rob your house, and have our way with you?’
“Hannah flushed deeply. ‘That’s not funny.’
“’No,’” Jonathon said solemnly. ‘It’s not funny. So I wish you’d stop making me feel like a criminal.’” (p. 80)

Jonathon, how very Billy Loomis of you. 

"What do I have to do to prove to you that I'm not a killer?"

Also, I don’t think you can speak for Lance. The man has threatened to tie you up because you insist on putting weight on your injured leg. With the amount of times Hannah has wandered off into the blizzard or gotten violent with one of you, I’m sure the thought of tying her up crossed his mind at least once.

While Jonathon acts like a kicked puppy about these suspicions, Lance just gets angry and snide. 

I guess his approach is the Mother Gothel method.

“Gasping, she felt Lance crush her down into the snow, and his eyes flashed above her with a strange, dark light.
“ 'Oh, I forgot,’ he said quietly. ‘You don’t like being this close to escaped killers, do you?’
“Hannah gasped in terror. She could see the tense lines of his cheeks, the endless dark of his eyes. As she gazed up helplessly, she could feel her lips moving, trying to get out the words.
“ 'I don’t know what you mean,’ she whispered. ‘I – I don’t know what you’re talking about –'
“ 'Oh … I think you do.’
“ 'It’s – it’s just that I was on the roof – and I was so – so scared –'
“ 'You don’t know what scared is.’
“Without warning, he rolled off.
“ 'Oh. And by the way … I tried to start your car but nothing worked. Guess you really are stranded now.’” (p. 131)

“ 'You were watching me!’
“ 'Watching you?’ Lance said slowly, as if considering the possibility. ‘If that was on my mind, a locked door wouldn’t do you much good.’ (p. 172)

That’s really comforting, Lance. You say and do things like those quoted above and then have the audacity to get angry when Hannah finds you a little suspicious. And Jonathon, Mr. ‘I understand why you’re nervous,’ 

no, I really don’t think you do. Hannah described it pretty well.

“But no matter who those guys are, we still have to be careful. Whoever they are, Meg and I are still alone with them – and if we act too suspicious and scared, that could be dangerous … and if we act too nice and trusting, that could be dangerous, too.” (p. 70)

This is one thing women and femme presenting individuals talk about a lot – curtailing their behavior to best protect themselves. This is often what has saved potential victims of serial killers – learning to adapt to appease this person so you can escape. The same is often done by victims of domestic violence, sexual assault and harassment. You do what you have to do to avoid being harmed as much as possible. Not knowing anything about these men, and considering Lance got violent with her almost immediately, it’s more than understandable that Hannah would be thinking like this.

Despite having read this book before, I couldn’t remember most of it. However, that’s not very telling, as aforementioned, the first time I read this was about nineteen years ago. I didn’t remember all the weird things that our four central characters encountered or who the person behind all of these scary occurrences turned out to be. I had the pleasure of being in suspense all over again, and in that aspect, the story delivers. I didn’t remember what happened next and couldn’t wait to find out – binge reading over 100 pages in one night. Despite being more annoyed by Hannah and still unsure about both Jonathon and Lance, I did care enough about the central characters to want them to survive and hoped that neither of the boys was the one terrorizing the sisters.

Did it hold up? I think I’ll shave down my original rating slightly. It is a fun, quick and enjoyable read that wasn’t too predictable, even the second time around. It’s decent entertainment for a snowy afternoon, being both short enough and suspenseful enough to be read in one sitting. I’m glad I revisited it, and will probably do so again.

6.5/10

If you want to see my reading journey for this book or follow my future reading endeavors, you can friend or follow me on Goodreads.

Saturday, December 10, 2022

I’m Glad My Mom Died (2022)

 By: Jennette McCurdy

Genre: Memior / Autobiography / Non-Fiction

If you grew up watching Nickelodeon in the mid-2000s or had a sibling or child that did, you will most likely recognize Jennette McCurdy as Samantha Puckett from iCarly and Sam & Cat. A moderately successful child actress, Jennette and her character, Sam, have been beloved by young millenials and elder gen Z for the past fifteen years. What no one knew was behind the scenes and her plucky façade Jennette was struggling with many issues and often suffering in silence. Her memoir describes her experiences with childhood fame as well as abuse and exploitation at the hands of show runners and her own mother - how damaging it can be and how she began to take her life back.

The tongue-in-cheek title of this memoir may be off-putting to some, but eight pages into the book and I was glad her Mom died too. Some may wrongfully assume this is the memoir of a spoiled child star ungrateful for the opportunities and success she’s had, many due to her mother’s diligent work in getting her to them. This is not that. This is the story of a young woman forced into a career she didn’t want by a narcissistic (Jennette’s words, I’m not armchair diagnosing) mother wanting to live out her dreams of stardom through her daughter. This is the story of someone who experienced emotional, physical, and, arguably, sexual abuse at the hands of the one person she should have been able to trust most in the world; a girl that would do whatever she could to please the mother she idolized, often to her own detriment.

From a very young age Jennette was told she wasn’t good enough. She was ridiculed for the way she acted while her mother struggled with her first bout of Stage 4 breast cancer. Jennette was two years old at that time, and would be reminded weekly of how awful she was at that time for many years into her childhood. Her appearance was always a point of criticism:

“Each ‘good’ thing Mom says about my ‘natural beauty’ is followed up by its downside which serves as the justification for its need to be enhanced by a little good old-fashioned store-bought beauty. And since it seems like every single ‘naturally beautiful’ thing about me comes with a downside that needs to be enhanced by store-bought beauty, I’m beginning to wonder if I’m really naturally beautiful at all, or if Mom’s use of the term ‘naturally beautiful’ goes in the same place where others would just use the term ‘ugly.’” (p. 59)

It wasn’t just her beauty that her mother fixated on, but her weight too. At age eleven her mother introduced her to calorie restriction and starving themselves became a joint activity, Jennette quickly becoming anorexic. This would be the beginning of her battle with disordered eating, going from years of anorexia to a year or so of binge eating and settling on bulimia before finally seeking treatment in her mid-to-late twenties.

I do want to highlight that there is A LOT of description of these eating disorders, detailing many tricks she used to restrict calories while deep into anorexia and the bingeing and purging of bulimia. If you struggle with an eating disorder many passages of this book may be triggering for you. Jennette describes the gory details of these disorders, the physical impact they left on her body (a particular body-horror scene while she’s on a plane to Australia for instance) as well as her mind. Thankfully her tricks and tools for recovery are also discussed in the later chapters which some may find beneficial.

Jennette was raised as a sheltered Mormon, homeschooled by her mother, leaving her little contact with those outside her family and her church. Her mother was her everything and she would do anything to please her. As aforementioned, she got into acting because her mother wanted her to and continued to act to please her mother, even if it was taking a toll on her own wellbeing. This is what begins to create conflict in her mind with how she sees and feels about her relationship with her mother.

“Fame has put a wedge between Mom and me that I didn’t think was possible. She wanted this. And I wanted her to have it. I wanted her to be happy. But now that I have it, I realize that she’s happy and I’m not. Her happiness came at the cost of mine. I feel robbed and exploited.” (p. 121)

“’Smile for the paparazzi,’ Mom orders me.
“Without even spotting them, a vacant puppetlike smile crosses my face automatically. My eyes are dead, my soul is nowhere to be found, but a smile is on my face and that’s all that counts.” (p. 125)

When Jennette would tell her mother that she didn’t want to act anymore her mother would start to cry or berate her until she agreed not to quit. When Jennette showed interest in writing, even sitting down as a pre-teen and drafting a 110 page screenplay, her mother shot her down instantly without even reading the product of her daughter’s hard work. She refused to condone anything that might take Jennette’s focus away from acting, never caring what Jennette truly wanted.

“I absolutely prefer writing to acting. Through writing, I feel power for the first time in my life. I don’t have to say somebody else’s words. I can write my own. I can be myself for once. I like the privacy of it. Nobody’s watching. Nobody’s judging. Nobody’s weighing in. No casting directors or agents or managers or Mom. Just me and the page. Writing is the opposite of performing to me. Performing feels inherently fake. Writing feels inherently real.” (p. 86)

From the narrative, it appears Jennette’s iCarly costar, Miranda Cosgrove, may have been one of her first real friends – and much of that friendship was initially conducted online via AOL Instant Messenger (y’all remember that fossil?) away from the prying eyes of Jennette’s mom. The more Jennette tried to pull away and have a little space for herself, her friendships and/or relationships, the more abusive and suffocating her mother became, calling her names, throwing things at her, threatening to disown her, even posting nasty things about her on her fan page. The amount of awful things this woman did is heartbreaking and rage inducing.

Keeping Jennette so sheltered also left her at a disadvantage in the dating world. She was never even taught about her own period, never mind given any sort of “sex talk.” When Jennette was away from her mother, the creepy dudes would come to prey. Between inappropriate age gaps, coerced oral, and a first time where consent is so dubious it borders on sexual assault, the majority of her experiences with men are awful. The only decent guy she dates is Steven, who does manage to show her how a real relationship should work.

The memoir does not get heavy into detail about the abuses inflicted upon the young actors on Nickelodeon shows, despite some media fanfare on the topic. The verbal abuse, manipulation, pitting of young actors against each other, and the provision of alcohol to minors conducted by The Creator is mentioned. When the stories of mistreatment leaked, Sam & Cat was cancelled and Jennette was offered $300,000 in hush money which she refused.

While the exploitation and abuse from the studio and those in charge of the shows she was on are definitely factors in her story, this memoir is more about the conflicted relationship between a narcissistic mother and a daughter that will sacrifice herself to make her mother happy. Half of the book is prior to her mother’s passing, the other half dedicated to the process of living life without her.

Following her mother’s death, Jennette’s eating disorder worsens and she turns to alcohol to numb her pain and mixed feelings. No longer having her mother in her life is both freeing and anxiety-inducing. She has to get to know herself for the first time and that can be a challenge when you’ve spent your entire life living for someone else.

“I tried desperately to understand and know my mother – what made her sad, what made her happy, and on and on and on – at the expense of ever really knowing myself. Without Mom around, I don’t know what I want. I don’t know what I need. I don’t know who I am.” (p. 223)

Jennette doesn’t shy away from discussing her low points nor her struggles with recovery and finding herself. It’s easy to empathize as she describes her thoughts and feelings. There is no magical cure-all – recovery is a lot of work that is never ending, regardless if it’s from trauma, eating disorders, mental health conditions, addiction, or all of the above. It’s something that will get easier with time and effort, but will never truly be done. She also makes it clear that it will never happen until you make that choice for yourself, because no one else can do that work for you.

“So much of my life has felt so out of my control for so long. And I’m done with that being my reality.
“I want my life to be in my hands. Not an eating disorder’s or a casting director’s or an agent’s or my mom’s. Mine.” (p. 293)

While the subject matter is heavy, the writing itself is very easy to read. Jennette’s voice seems to grow as she does throughout the chronology – from a naïve child eager to please to a grown woman taking her life back. Her writing comes off as the age she was when whatever event she’s describing was happening – like we’re getting her literal thoughts from that moment in time. She does interweave some humor with the harsh reality that is the life she reveals to us. However, this humor is more sarcastic barbs and dry witticisms rather than the laugh-out-loud hilarity the book has been marketed to have.

Both heartbreaking and enlightening, this memoir provides insight into the life of a reluctant child star. A survivor of narcissistic abuse that still battles with conflicting emotions surrounding her feelings on her mother, Jennette details how she will always love her mother and does miss her, but recognizes how toxic that relationship truly was. This is truly an amazing work that had me just wanting to hug her due to everything she’s been through. Highly recommended if you can handle the heavy subject matter.

8.5/10

Me to Jennette Throughout This Book

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