Lockjaw
Matteo L. Cerilli
   Tundra Books
   Fiction, YA Horror
   Themes: Canids, Country Tales, Diversity, Ghosts and Spirits, Girl Power
   ***
   
Description
Bridlington is a quintessential small American town, the sort of place where goodly folks mind their 
   own business and stay out of trouble... and where, too often, the cries of the outcasts are ignored in 
   the name of keeping the peace. When young Chuck Warren, a bullied eleven-year-old boy, died in the old 
   mill one night, Paz Espino saw what happened, but the grown-ups don't believe that she saw a monster in 
   the shadows below the hole in the floor. She's branded a problem child, a troublemaker, and only her 
   three best friends stick by her as the rest of the town turns their backs. But Paz is like a bulldog 
   with jaws locked on a bone; she's determined to find and kill the beast, and if nobody else will help 
   her, then she'll do it herself or die trying.
   The young stranger blows into town with a cruddy old car, a mutt named Bird, an envelope of money, and 
   no name. He's looking for a fresh start far away from home, and Bridlington seems as good a place as 
   any. But from the moment he pulls up at the gas station, he gets a sense of hidden secrets and lurking 
   danger, a sense that grows stronger after a strange encounter with a group of kids outside the 
   convenience store. Taking the name Asher, he starts trying to build a new life, making friends with the 
   right sort of people, but Bridlington is a town haunted by dark secrets - and the bill for looking the 
   other way is about to come due...
Review
In the vein of Stephen King's It where children are left to deal with the problems 
   intentionally ignored (and sometimes openly exacerbated) by adults and generations past, 
   Lockjaw exposes the "monster" underlying the veneer of civility, in towns small and large. 
   Though at times effectively creepy and even surreal, sometimes it gets too clever for its own good 
   with confusing timeline shifts and some exceptionally heavy-handed messages about silence in the face 
   of injustices by the end.
   Starting with young Chuck's doomed efforts to connect with a new group of outcast friends after being 
   bullied on the playground, the tale goes to "Asher" and his seemingly carefree arrival in Bridlington 
   with nothing but a dog for company. This is clearly a young man with secrets in his past, and it's 
   just as clear that this small town has secrets of its own, even as he tries to ignore the pricklings 
   of premonition that hang over his first introduction to the group of outcast kids. Other characters 
   who become entangled in things include Paz's older sister, who has done everything in her power to 
   distance herself from her peculiar sibling, and Beetle, a trans teen who is counting the seconds until 
   he can escape to college and leave the whispers and cruelties of small town life in the dust. Creepy 
   overtones and tension drift through the tale in a thickening miasma that sometimes obscures the plot 
   itself, not helped by how the story jumps back and forth in time at random (it's possible this is an 
   issue with the audiobook, that there is some hint in the printed version, because otherwise it comes 
   across as an author trying to wow the reader with a two-by-four surprise that felt more like jerking 
   me around for half the book), and eventually the promised supernatural/gory elements come to the 
   forefront as the metaphoric chickens of Bridlington come home to roost. Asher, set up to be the main 
   character, became my least favorite of the bunch, far too cagey with his past and shallow in his 
   motives (the reason is later revealed, but by then my general dislike of his apparent shallow pursuit 
   of popularity - even in the face of glaring red flags -had set in, plus even after the reveal he 
   remained overreactive to an almost cartoonish degree when confronted with conflict, to the point of 
   literally jumping around and denting his car door and needing to be socked in the face by another 
   character to calm down). The latter parts feel drawn out to grind in the main lesson about the 
   toxicity of brushing off bullying and abuse and intolerance as "not my business" and masking it as 
   small-down politeness, and how the interest on those injustices compounds exponentially. The heavy 
   hand of the Message smashes the reader in the face repeatedly by the end, to an almost numbing 
   effect. This alone dropped it down to nearly three stars; the final half-star loss concerns the 
   unnecessary cruelty of the fate of Bird the dog.
