Description
The Disallowed
The Humorous Story of a Contemporary Vampire Family
Heng Lee is a goatherd in the remote mountains north-east of Chiang Rai in northern Thailand, very close to the border with Laos. It is a tight-knit community where everyone knows one another.
Heng becomes sick all of a sudden, but not too sick to take the goats out, until one day he starts fainting, and needs help. There are no medical doctors in the neighbourhood, but the Shaman has been good enough for most people for centuries, so he visits her.
The Shaman takes some specimens and comes to the conclusion that Heng’s kidneys have stopped functioning and he, therefore, has little time left to live.
The battle is on to save Heng’s life, but there are other forces at work too. Could he be becoming a vampire?
What will become of Heng, his family and the rest of the community, if he takes the Shaman’s advice?
Visited 284 times , 1 Visits today
Enrico Grafitti
5.0 out of 5 stars Fesh, fun and vibrant!
Reviewed in the United Kingdom on 14 July 2014
When you see the word ‘vampire’ in a book’s description, it is too easy, in this facile world of the archaic categorisation used by most publishers, to dismiss the work as yet another regurgitation of the popular teen-angst novels of late, or the titillating eroticism that claims to be an update of the original work by Stoker. Well that is a pity because that particular trap will only have you re-reading the same unoriginal works over and over again.
Writing is a creative activity, and with ‘The Disallowed’, author Owen Jones has presented readers with a gem of a tale which sparkles with originality whilst still bringing back a certain nostalgia to those of us old enough to recall the memes created by the Hammer Horror movies of the mid-fifties through to the seventies.
Jones’ take on the vampire story starts with a major break from ‘tradition’ in his setting of the tale. Instead of the tried and tested Transylvanian castle of yore, we have a small agricultural village in northern Thailand in the present day. There’s no Count creeping around dark passageways either. His counterpart is a simple goat-herder, Heng Lee, who, through circumstances never fully explained, experiences a traumatic change that leaves its mark not just on him but, initially, on his immediate family and subsequently on the society in which he lives.
The characters are wonderfully drawn, and Jones’ skill quickly has the reader sympathising with their plight. As Heng Lee overcomes his situation and ultimately turns it to his advantage, many subtle parables regarding the working of our World quickly become apparent. There is also a wicked vein of shrewd humour running through the tale that will provoke many a grin as the reader becomes engrossed in the trials and tribulations that await the protagonists.
Highly recommended to those who dare to read something fresh and vibrant!
(Amazon)