The Angel of Indian Lake

by Stephen Graham Jones

The Indian Lake Trilogy (3)

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The final installment in the most lauded trilogy in the history of horror novels picks up four years after Don't Fear the Reaper as Jade returns to Proofrock, Idaho, to build a life after the years of sacrifice--only to find the Lake Witch is waiting for her in New York Times bestselling author Stephen Graham Jones's finale. It's been four years in prison since Jade Daniels last saw her hometown of Proofrock, Idaho, the day she took the fall, protecting her friend Letha and her family from show more incrimination. Since then, her reputation, and the town, have changed dramatically. There's a lot of unfinished business in Proofrock, from serial killer cultists to the rich trying to buy Western authenticity. But there's one aspect of Proofrock no one wants to confront...until Jade comes back to town. The curse of the Lake Witch is waiting, and now is the time for the final stand. New York Times bestselling author Stephen Graham Jones has crafted an epic horror trilogy of generational trauma from the Indigenous to the townies rooted in the mountains of Idaho. It is a story of the American west written in blood. show less

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11 reviews


In this final installment of the Indian Lake trilogy, Jade is no longer a teenager, no longer an inmate and, thanks to the influence of her best friend, Letha, she's making a stab at adulthood teaching history at Proofrock high school. Sure, she's still smoking a lot and maybe not sleeping much, but she's retired from the final girl stuff, getting therapy, and even wearing pantyhose and sensible heels to work. So when some local kids go missing, it's not her problem anymore. And when a head rolls through the middle of the school car line, her only involvement is in babysitting the new sheriff's toddler. But Jade can't just opt out of what's happening and soon enough she'd drawn across the lake once again.

In any trilogy, the final book show more has to pull everything together while also providing larger stakes and in this regard this book delivers. This isn't a book that will make sense when read out of order, but if you've read the previous two books, you'll find this to be a satisfying ending, even if Stephen Graham Jones is far too eager to kill off favorite characters. Adult Jade is still prickly, but she's also oddly empathetic, understanding the trauma of the people around her and hoping to help them. There's more gore and jump scares than ever. Jones has a read love of slasher movies. show less
½
"There's final girls everywhere, aren't there? I used to think they were the rarest breed, the finest vintage. But everyone who's got something to fight for, they'll fight for it"

No one writes final girls like [a:Stephen Graham Jones|96300|Stephen Graham Jones|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1631159041p2/96300.jpg]. Here we are, back with Jade. It's been a few years and she's finding herself, somehow, in this small town. But things never rest and we knew, just knew, that it was not over.

If you can, I highly highly recommend this one as an audio. Not only does Stephen Graham Jones read some of the last chapters, but [a:Stephen King|3389|Stephen King|https://images.gr-assets.com/authors/1362814142p2/3389.jpg] also makes an show more appearance!

"You - you watch these movies too?" I ask.
"Survival training around here,"


This is a great conclusion. It's sad but also so much about hope and the will to push through. So much strength and rage from the final girls. Not everyone will make it to the end, but it was worth the ride. I'll definitely re-listen to this whole series again. It's just so good. And the movie references - they NEVER get old! I love them!
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I was super excited to be granted an ARC copy of this book, the third in the Lake Witch trilogy written by Stephen Graham Jones. The first two books, My Heart is a Chainsaw, and Don’t Fear the Reaper were big, splattery tales of slashers gone wild, with metadoses of pop horror culture Easter eggs to lure in the hardcore horror movie fans. Or even the softcore ones. Angel is no different in this regard. It is often times an exploded, pulpy mess of confusion, but that’s what the truest forms of the horror genre are, I suppose. Lots of twisted trails of our blood soaked nightmares. I'm trying too hard to evoke images of guts and gore, I know. But that’s what the trilogy is; Jade Daniels, the Native American final girl who can never show more be that. A final girl.

This story brings Jade back to Proofrock, the idyllic little lakeside community in Idaho that has become one of America's top destinations for murder. Jade returns after being incarcerated for her crimes from the first two books, and after enduring some state mandated therapy. But she’s out and she’s back, and she’s snagged a teacher position at her old high school, thanks to online college courses and friends with money in high places. As Jade pops pills to help her stay sane, it happens again. Students go missing, wind up dead, and ultimately have a connection with Jade and her obsession with horror.

I feel like Jones felt the pressure of having to top the frenetic pacing of books one and two here, but as is the case with many a part three story ( especially in film), the attempt doesn’t always hit the mark. This does not mean that I wasn’t entertained. Far from it… But some of the deaths/mayhem felt gratuitous. And by gratuitous, I mean deaths that just happened without provocation. I’m talking Tucker and Dale level accidents. Some of the deaths were certainly unexpected but also random, as in Final Destination random, but they didn’t feel intrinsic here.

That having been said, I feel like the number of relevant shocks and surprises outweighed the baseless ones. Favorite characters are not safe here, and the first one to go (for me) had me shouting “you bastard," at Jones—in a good way. We see everything from Jade's POV, which can be challenging because she’s not a linear thinker, but it’s true to character so be prepared. Also, reading the first two books is essential.

I think two of my favorite things about how this story was laid out, were the asides written by an investigative firm about Jade's mental state and progress after jail (yes, Mr. Jones, sir. I’m calling it jail too), and the one story thread that had me comparing Jade to Ripley in Aliens. If there is one person to focus on saving, that’s the one.

And finally, thanks to Mr. Jones and Saga Press for providing the ARC. It was one wild ride!
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In his afterword the author talks about complaints he received about voices other than Jade's narrating in the first two books, so he decided to make this all Jade all the time (mostly) which I think was a mistake. Lovable though Jade is her trademark coping mechanism of turning everything into a slasher movie reference is unremitting if uninterrupted, and the habit of wandering down mental digressions of speculation and self recrimination and the nature of final girls and imagined motives and imagined acts, often while standing beside two or three people in the process of being brutally murdered, can actually get in the way and even confuse the complicated-enough actions and mysteries of the unfolding story. There's a self-indulgence show more to the self-flagellation and the dissociation which threatens to overwhelm the story, and they do profoundly effect the flow and the pacing. She came by them honestly, they're part of her character, but there's a tendency to wallow while the reader really wants to find out what the walking dead guy is going to do next with the golden pick-axe. This effect might have been diluted with a few other POVs, is all I'm saying.

For all that, the book is a fine capstone to the trilogy, insane plot twists and insane amounts of bloody murder, and insane amounts of punishment inflicted on the protagonist and her friends. Will they be tempered in the fires of all this horror, or will they succumb to the curse of Prufrock? This is Indian Lake and this is Stephen Graham Jones: no-one is safe.
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If you enjoyed My Heart is a Chainsaw and Don't Fear the Reaper (and you should have! they were great!) then The Angel of Indian Lake is satisfactorily more of the same. It was horrible, in the best possible way, to go back to Indian Lake with Jade Daniels again. Don't Fear the Reaper was my personal favorite of the trilogy and, probably because of that fact, this one didn't make that same high water mark for me—but don't worry, it's still plenty high enough water to drown in.
Review of eGalley

The documentary film “The Savage History of Proofrock, Idaho,” is, according to Hettie Jannson, not simply her senior project but a memorial to everyone lost. Eight years have passed since the Fourth of July carnage, four years since Dark Mill South arrived in Proofrock.

Now, if she could just capture the Angel of Indian Lake on film . . . .

=========

In this, the final installment of the trilogy, following “My Heart is a Chainsaw” and “Don’t Fear the Reaper,” readers once again travel to Proofrock, Idaho where they find all the expected characters in place. Although there is sufficient background for the story to work as a standalone, readers are short-changing themselves if they don’t read all three show more books [in order] in the trilogy.

Here, as in the earlier books, the veneration of the slasher film trope continues. Four years have passed; Jade returns only to discover the Lake Witch waits for her. Over the course of the three stories, she has grown, matured . . . and survived.

Following the chapters, the detective’s report provides some information but some readers may find these installments disrupt the flow of the story. Nevertheless, they provide some necessary context for the unfolding of this complex story.

Readers who embrace horror, who welcome the sinister, who relish plot twists and turns will find much to appreciate here as the story inexorably moves toward a perfect denouement.

Highly recommended.

I received a free copy of this book from Saga Press, S&S, Saga Press and NetGalley and am voluntarily leaving an honest review.
#TheAngelofIndianLake #NetGalley
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Jade Daniels, the reluctant but determined heroine of this...The Indian Lake Trilogy has returned to Proofrock, Idaho... (yes, there is such a place), after her second prison stay for the events that she was involved in in the first two books of this trilogy, My Heart Is a Chainsaw and Don’t Fear the Reaper. Jade's best friend, Letha Mondragon-Tompkins, has gotten her a job teaching high school history, (I can't imagine this), but all the meds and therapy available aren’t really helping. If you've read the first two books, this won't come as a big surprise. Before long, a real estate project at the site of the previous massacre at “Camp Blood,” along with a pair of missing teenagers, and a raging forest fire started by a show more grieving game warden, have exploded into a nightmare. The writing is still very graphic and precise, but while every word has been carefully chosen, they sometimes fail to really explain what is actually happening. The plot is often overly filled with urban legends. I'm sure the true horror fans that's a big plus. This author is very good at producing images that horror movie producers would pay huge sums of cash to use in the next slasher film. Imagine seeing on the 'big screen" Jade’s rapist father back from the dead, or a murderous child gleefully mutilating many of the town's residents, or ghost enjoying a dead-time at the local lake...at least you could almost stand a chance of working out what is really happening, which is something that doesn't always happen much of the time here... but hey...it's still good, if not necessarily clean fun, and I bet Mr. Jones had a grand old time writing it. Oh...and the trilogy should be read in order. I know that those of you that know me well will be surprised that I actually did that. show less
½

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Author Information

Picture of author.
102+ Works 14,745 Members
Stephen Graham Jones is the acclaimed author of All the Beautiful Sinners, The Bird Is Gone: A Manifesto, The Fast Red Road - A Plainsong, and is an Associate Professor of English at Texas Tech University.

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Series

Common Knowledge

Canonical title
The Angel of Indian Lake
Original publication date
2024-03
People/Characters
Jennifer "Jade" Daniels
Important places
Proofrock, Idaho, USA
Epigraph
There's never been a final girl like this. -Carol Clover
Dedication
for this kid named Jason.
I would have swam out for you, man.
we all would have.
First words
The Savage History of Proofrock, Idaho opens looking through two eyeholes of a mask, with some heavy, menacing breathing amping up the menace

What those eyeholes are fixed on from behind the bushes is a ten-... (show all)year-old kid. It's nighttime, well after midnight, and the kid's sitting on a barely moving swing at Founders Park. It's where the staging area for Terra Nova used to be, eight years ago. -Here Comes the Boogeyman
Original language
English
Canonical DDC/MDS
813
Canonical LCC
PS3560.O5395

Classifications

Genres
Horror, Fiction and Literature
DDC/MDS
813Literature & rhetoricAmerican literature in EnglishAmerican fiction in English
LCC
PS3560 .O5395Language and LiteratureAmerican literatureAmerican literatureIndividual authors1961-
BISAC

Statistics

Members
452
Popularity
67,356
Reviews
11
Rating
(4.02)
Languages
English, Italian
Media
Paper, Audiobook, Ebook
ISBNs
12
ASINs
4