Review: Revelator

4 stars. Really strange, and beautiful; this book is many things. I’m still processing. I may have to read it again when I’m out of the newborn phase and a little more clear-eyed. There’s a lot layered in… it’s a dark fable that touches on religion, fanaticism, tradition, power, morality, humanity… Big themes. Deep questions. Ambiguous answers. Or maybe clear answers, with ambiguous consequences. It showcases humans at their very best and very worst. I say this often in reviews - I’d love to read this for a lit class and have some things analyzed and explained to me. It’s worth a close study.

How to explain? Stella Birch is our main character, and she is strong, charming and feisty. The book alternates between her unusual coming-of-age in the 1930s and the aftermath of her guardian’s death in the 1940s. She is a revelator, which means she can take “communion” with her family’s “god,” which lives in a cave on their property. Though it might make her an iconic herald of “god’s” “message,” it is a rough and damaging responsibility, and the more she learns the more she resists. But the cycle continues, and soon another revelator is born to carry on the family’s worship and Stella must choose between embracing her dark heritage or breaking the cycle once and for all.

Or something like that, anyway.

This book is historical horror at its finest and its most unique. The sense of time and place is very strong and very important. The author did his research and the level of detail is admirable. Stella is also a formidably awesome heroine. Her protectiveness and loyalty and determination are the beating heart of the story, as are her relationships with Abby and Alfonse, both of them saviors, sometimes annoyingly.

I thought the depiction of different types of goodness and different types of evil was very interesting. I don’t know how metaphorical or allegorical the author meant to be, but I frequently found myself considering cults, especially religious ones, and the way cult leaders apply the concept of “chosen ones.” The complex sense of obligation and pride and gratitude and special-ness that creates. The difficulty to resist. Especially when it’s family. This book wrestles with all of that and more.

Anyway. I wouldn’t describe Revelator as particularly scary. But it is captivating and intense and unique. I saw it described somewhere as a book that is more about the journey than the destination and I think that’s true. It will probably haunt - and inspire - me for a long time.

Revelator on: Amazon | Bookshop.org | Goodreads