Holiday Spirit Book 3:  Monsters Arise

Holiday Spirit Book 3: Monsters Arise by John DeGuire

Reviewed by Ephantus Gold

Holiday Spirit Book 3: Monsters Arise!‘ by John DeGuire is a book that will give you friends in beings you never imagined or expected. These are characters you will be surprised how quickly you get drawn and attached to, and how strongly you will want them safe as they unravel a world that feels increasingly fragile with each new page in the hands of individuals who pose the question of who the real monsters really are.  Purchase Here.

The tale takes us right to the edge of the world – the Arctic, where the main character, Count Dracula, who is described as a peripatetic figure, appears as a hidden traveler moving through the storm. He is riding a resurrected woolly mammoth, accompanied by a saber-toothed tiger. They are planning a rescue that feels as emotional as it is dangerous for his friend, Captain Saul Frankenstein. Saul was kidnapped for his unique monstrous biology under the orders of Dr. Moreau and Professor Moriarty. One is a scientist and the other a criminal mastermind, both of whom intend to exploit him for their experiments. Dracula himself had also earlier been captured and surgically given a human heart transplant by the duo. They had subjected him to the procedure, hoping to study his hybrid vampiric physiology and use their findings to unlock secrets to prolonged life for specific human elites. As for Saul, it turns out that he was found near death by a female Yeti who took him home, nursed him back to life, and later became his wife according to the Yeti customs. He is now the Yeti’s king and has adapted to their brutal ways. He also oversees their gladiatorial ice battles.

Elsewhere, Dracula’s wife, Aoife, learns, much to her shock, that her husband is alive. We first meet her mourning for her kidnapped twins, newborns who Dracula himself didn’t know were born. The news gives her much-needed hope and renewed determination to fight on against Moreau’s network, alongside Sherlock Holmes, Dr. Watson, and the invisible Dr. Ralph Ellison, forming an unlikely alliance between humans and monsters, united by a shared longing for survival and redemption. As you follow their planning, several questions arise, chief among them whether Dracula’s heart will survive the cold weather in the Arctic let alone the journey ahead to find his family, whether his departure from the Yetis land will be seamless, whether Saul, who is living his best life as a king will accept to join him and lastly, what exactly Moreau and Moriarty are really building, a plan so dire that they are willing to weaponize monsters to achieve it.

This tale wields great characters who smoothly propel the plot, such as Dracula, whose health and unknown fatherhood create urgency and tension, Aoife, the Werewolf Contessa who embodies maternal ferocity and the moral heart of the human-monster alliance, Saul who embodies adaptation and redemption, The Invisible Man who bridges science and monstrosity, Holmes who offers the logical, deductive lens through which the conspiracy gets uncovered, Annie, Emma, and Pete who represent innocence caught in the crossfire, reminding us of the cost to the next generation, among others. It uses turns and twists but leans heavily on heightened drama and emotional tropes, with most chapters ending in emotional uncertainty, not in what will happen next but in how it will feel. The author is brilliant enough to use dual narration that provides the long read with emotional contrast and deep sensory immersion, where the environment feels like a living character and classic characters such as Dracula and Holmes become modern archetypes.

Holiday Spirit Book 3: Monsters Arise!‘ by John DeGuire is bound to leave you richly entertained even if you are not a fan of classic monster lore, precisely so because it just doesn’t tell a story but rather makes you see a beautiful but broken world, where the greatest fear comes not from a literal monster but from the coldness and greed of the human heart. With lessons such as ‘a family is chosen, not given’ and ‘survival requiring adaptability, not just strength,’ this is a book that will leave you looking at love, the past, grief, and power differently, as fuel, not for destruction but for transformation.

 

 

Comments are closed.