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Rachel Reviews: The Mole People by Kevin Landt

Suzie suffers from schizophrenia and when this starts to drag her life into darker realms, we go with Landt's narrative to the Mole People

By Rachel DeemingPublished 12 days ago 2 min read
Rachel Reviews: The Mole People by Kevin Landt
Photo by Ahmet Kemal on Unsplash

I liked what Kevin Landt did in The Mole People. I think to take the mental struggle of an individual and attempt to follow it through a narrative is ambitious and commendable. In my opinion, he has done this with a great degree of success.

Suzie is the central character and we are very much inside her head. She is schizophrenic and controls it with meds, is at college and has a loving relationship with Robbie. But she slides and her stability becomes more than shaky, resulting in her escaping the life that she knows and ending up in Las Vegas.

This is where she meets the Mole People and is brought into their "family" to live in the storm drains under the city. You feel throughout that Suzie is vulnerable and that, because she cannot see things clearly, she makes assumptions and a whole chain of bad decisions and in that, I feel bad for her. Her judgement impaired and the need to escape from the constant mental tugging which is going on inside of her means that she seeks drugs to mute and soften her distress.

Of course, this is in some ways counterproductive and we see Suzie's steady decline through the course of the book.

The novel is very much a book of two halves: the first half shows Suzie gradually being lost in the darkness that is mental illness and insecurity. The second half deals with her acceptance into the Mole People and what that involves for her.

Landt's narrative is tight and well-paced and he describes Suzie's state of mind and her increasing paranoia well. The characters who she encounters have their back stories which shapes the idea of who they are as people and how they've come to be where they are: on the outskirts of society, living day to day to survive.

There's nothing at all to dislike in this book. It's a quick read with a subject which has darkness in it but deals with the subject of mental illness with a sensitivity and an insight so that it is more like looking at the devolution of a person and how this can happen by degrees and quickly if left unchecked. Likewise, it illustrates how with some assistance it is possible to see a way out.

Rachel Rating: 3/5 stars

This review was first published on Reedsy Discovery:

Thanks for stopping by! If you do read this, please leave a comment as I love to interact with my readers. If you read the book, I'd love to know what you think of it.

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Rachel Deeming

Storyteller. Poet. Reviewer. Traveller.

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Comments (3)

  • Dawnxisoul393art12 days ago

    The book addresses the delicate topic of mental illness with sensitivity and insight, shedding light on the devolution of a person and the possibility of finding a way out with assistance. Thank you for sharing Rachel!

  • Oooo, this certainly sounds intriguing. I love reading about people being paranoid and spiralling out of control. I'll add this to my TBR that I never seem to read from 😅 Fantastic review!

  • This sounds like it's right down my alley. I love this type of story. Thank you for you excellent review!!!

Rachel DeemingWritten by Rachel Deeming

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