Wynn Wheldon

A ghost story without the scary bits

Scott Blackwood’s ultra-clever See How Small is a novel written to be studied, not read

issue 24 January 2015

Two men walk into an ice cream parlour in Austin, Texas, order the three teenage girls working there to undress, then tie them up and gag them with their own underwear, and set fire to the place. However, See How Small is not interested in the why or the who, but rather in the lives of a group of characters affected by the incident. We learn about these lives both before and after the murders, mostly after.

This book is a kind of modern ghost story, without the frightening bits. Kate Ulrich is the mother of two of the girls. She is haunted by them. Jack Dewey is the firefighter who discovers their bodies. He too is haunted by them. Hollis Finger is the mentally traumatised ex-soldier who lives in a car outside the parlour, which is decorated with ‘seashells, buttons, beads, metal army men and hairless dolls’. And yes, he also is haunted by the girls.

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