About the book
The House of Order, John Paul Jaramillo, ISBN: 978-1937536169
Source: I received a copy in exchange for my fair and honest review
Review
Short stories are hard to review so it’s very rare that I feel intrigued enough to accept a review copy. The House of Order by John Paul Jaramillo certainly had me interested from its artwork so I decided to take a chance. (Judging a book by its cover? Guilty in this case I’m afraid!)
The stories seem to take the part of part grim memoir, part macabre folklore, part difficult recollections. Manita Ortiz endeavours to piece together a clear picture of his family’s past but – as is so often the case with family history – finds that it is difficult to sort through the truth, the embellished truth and the outright lies.
There are dark moments in these stories and – as the cover suggests – this is not a happy go-lucky book. However, this is strong and emotive writing, which pulls you in to the stories and leaves you thinking about them long after you’ve finished each one. The stories alone stand up to scrutiny but this is a case in which the whole is certainly greater than the sum of the parts: the full work is an excellent read and perfectly enjoyable in one indulgent sitting.