Alma Katsu, author of historical horror novels like The Hunger (2018) and The Deep (2020), returns to the genre in her latest The Fervor (releasing on April 26, 2022). Like her other novels, The Fervor centers on a main historical event, playing with the timeline and details ever so much. This time, readers are placed in 1940s America during Japanese internment, a time when American exceptionalism, isolationism, and, of course, xenophobia ran rampant. The links to our current cultural moment are pretty plain on the page. Like us, the characters are wrestling with a strange communicable illness thought to originate from Asia, and they witness a marked increase in the attacks on Asian Americans and Pacific Islanders in response. Unlike Covid-19 and the increased violence against AAPI people in the States and around the world, the sickness, “The Fervor,” is one part Japanese mythos and another part experimental bioweapon.
I read Alma Katsu’s last novel, The Hunger, because it was about the Donner Party’s fate. I knew going in things were going to be bad for the Donners and the families that followed them out west; slow starvation, ill-planning, and death buried in the snow-covered mountains. What I was not expecting was the horror Katsu created in such a constricted narrative. She was magically able to thread superstitious doubt, panic, and fear in a way that made reading the ill-fated journey less of an exercise in schadenfreude and more nail-biting. I am still scared when I think of passages in that book, so my anticipation for her latest novel, The Deep concerning the fates of the RMS Titanic and her sister ship the HMHS Britannic was palpable to say the least.
Both ships go down within four years of each other, and both sank due to the hubris of men enthralled by capitalism and war. While I may not know the history here as well as I did with The Hunger, I know Katsu is up against the challenge of reader expectations. The Deep is a strong novel and though tackling a historical tragedy so profoundly embedded in our cultural memory, it manages to build tension about exactly how the tragedy will unfold. As with The Hunger doubt, terror, and superstition haunt the characters and equalize them across the economic divisions that the Titanic made so clear. In The Deep, Katsu delivers another novel with a refreshing take on a story well-told. Read more