“we are only human, a condition of perpetual uncertainty and failure.”
Craig Davidson, The Saturday Night Ghost Club
As a child of the 80s, I find it really hard to resist the nostalgia of anything set at that time. Whether it’s actually 80s stuff like re-watching “The Goonies” for the thousandth time, or new things set in the 80s, like “Stranger Things”, I am a complete sucker for it. I think I especially like stories where the protagonists are kids because that’s what I can related to from that time. Enter The Saturday Night Ghost Club. Set it 1980s Niagara Falls, Davidson’s novel evokes a lot about that place and time to create the setting. Jake, a fat kid with few friends, spends a lot of his free time with his Uncle Calvin, an eccentric guy who is a die-hard believer in conspiracy theories and owner of a store dealing in occult objects. Jake recounts the experiences of one summer when he, his uncle, and a handful of others decide to initiate the Saturday Night Ghost Club – a group that visits Niagara Falls’ supposedly haunted spaces and listens to Calvin recount the stories of the gruesome events that happened there.
In a lot of ways, this is a classic coming-of-age novel that evokes writers like Stephen King. By turns funny and sad, it gets at the heart of what it feels like to start seeing the world through the eyes of the outsiders and castoffs who populate the novel. I thought this book was going to be about Jake growing up and out-growing his uncle’s ghost stories, but it turns out to be much more than that. Through the Saturday Night Ghost Club, Jake begins to realize that his uncle’s quirkiness is actually a symptom of a long-held family secret. I really like this novel, which I found both page-turning and tender. I got through it in a couple of days by reading and listening to it on audio, and the audio is worth it if you don’t want to pick up a copy.
Tomorrow look for my review of The Seven Husbands of Evelyn Hugo by Taylor Jenkins Reid which is, once again, something completely different. Until then, happy reading!
