
The Cipher
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Narrated by:
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Joshua Saxon
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By:
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Kathe Koja
About this listen
Kathe Koja's classic, award-winning horror novel is finally available as an audiobook.
Nicholas, a would-be poet, and Nakota, his feral lover, discover a strange hole in the storage room floor down the hall - "Black. Pure black and the sense of pulsation, especially when you look at it too closely, the sense of something not living but alive." It begins with curiosity, a joke - the Funhole down the hall. But then the experiments begin. "Wouldn't it be wild to go down there?" says Nakota. Nicholas says "We're not." But they're not in control, not from the first moment, as those experiments lead to obsession, violence, and a very final transformation for everyone who gets too close to the Funhole.
THE CIPHER was the winner of the 1991 Bram Stoker Award, and was recently named one of io9.com's Top 10 Debut Science Fiction Novels That Took the World by Storm. Long out-of-print and much sought-after, it is finally available as an audiobook, with a new foreword by the author.
©2012 Kathe Koja (P)2020 David N. WilsonCritic reviews
"An ethereal rollercoaster ride from start to finish." (The Detroit Free Press)
"Combines intensely poetic language and lavish grotesqueries." (BoingBoing)
"This powerful first novel is as thought-provoking as it is horrifying." (Publishers Weekly)
A love story with a gaping hole in the middle.
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This flippant plot summary illustrates how amazing Kathe Koja's work here is. This is a book which by rights should be a splattery romp with monsters, body horror and copious amounts of blood - and on one level, it is, with no judgement if that's what you want from your horror fiction! Koja, however, treats this goofy premise with absolute seriousness, and meticulously illustrates the effect that a fundamentally inexplicable event can have upon people, and most importantly on the relationships between those people. The heart (a word with a great deal of thematic weight here) of this book is love, communication, interaction - and how the absence of these destroys people. I will not go into any details which could spoil plot elements, but Koja sharply sketches and catalogues a series of profoundly dysfunctional relationships that run the gamut from distant and uncaring to manipulative and abusive, and how all of them are made worse by the Funhole. Cruelties are magnified, obsessions are sharpened, betrayals are encouraged.
Nakota is the centre of this, and at the centre of the entire book. She is an extraordinary character, one of the best I can remember in any horror book, and worth the price of admission alone. She has true interiority - her own motivations, unique reactions, her own agency - and all of this is achieved at a remove, with Nicholas being the narrator, and thus attempting to filter our perception of Nakota through his eyes and experiences. She is not having that! Nakota grabs hold of the narrative at various unpredictable points, and relinquishes it equally unpredictably, leaving Nicholas (and us) in a perpetual state of bamboozlement over her motivations. She is brilliant, and in many ways the most profound monster in the entire book.
Koja's prose is hypnotic, with sentences running on and joining into each other, eliding perceptions and events into complex shapes. Joshua Dixon deals with this skillfully, acting as a guide into the madness, but maybe leans slightly too far into Jonathan's passivity as a narrator.
This is a true horror classic that's great to have on audiobook. Highly recommended.
I was given this free review copy audiobook at my request and have voluntarily left this review.
"Love Is A Hole In The Heart"
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I found nothing from Poppy Brite, which wasn't surprising as she wouldn't have a book out for another year even though Lost Souls had already been touted as a big thing by reviewers; but I did find something from Kathe Koja.
The Cipher had a weird step-back cover, a hand cut-out, a face or something like it and an inner cover that spoke of exceptionally dark things. I was twenty years old and fresh from the books of Clive Barker, who had successfully redefined horror a few years before, and I was looking for something new; and with the story of Nicholas and Nakota, with the story of the hole and the madness that came with it, I got my wish.
The Cipher is a cipher, both as a book and as a phenomena within the book. There are no explanations, no ready ones at least, but there are many interpretations and each of these interpretations may in itself be a cipher.
The book is not for the faint of heart, neither creative weaklings or the easily repulsed should apply, but if you are in the necessary place in life,you are not easily repelled and have the creative fortitude to travel a route that offers little explanation, then The Cipher is certainly a route to take.
Originally I read the book in one feverish sitting, not noticing the sun had set and I had obtained my night-eyes until the orange street-lamps outside turned the page to a watered down blood red. I turned on a light then and kept reading; and it was dawn before I finally completed it; though I'm not sure I ever really closed the book.
Some books stay with you, they infect you like a virus.
So some years later, almost thirty (unbelievably) I saw an audiobook version pop up on Audiobook Boom that seemed to have my name on it. I mean, a free audiobook for nothing more than an honest review I'd write anyway?
If you hadn't realised already The Cipher is a book I hold in very high regard. Its one of those books that I hear people talking movie rights to and I shudder, as a part of me shuddered when I thought of an audiobook; that was until I saw who had done it.
Seriously if I ever get my novel finished (are we all writing novels?) than I'm going to get Joshua Saxon to do it for me. Anyone who can capture the obscene poetry of Kathe Koja and in the process transform an audiobook into something closer to a nine-hour one-man audio play can handle anything I could throw at him.
If you got this far in my little review then you probably should get this audiobook,just be warned its not an easy experience and you won't have an awful lot of fun with it; but it is captivating, compelling and more than a little rewarding.
As long as you don't expect to fully understanding any of it that is.
A Blast From The Past
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not a bad story
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The narrator, Joshua Saxon, is just brilliant as ever. I pick books to listen to simply because he narrated them and I'm never disappointed in that respect.
Disturbing
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Great concept - disappointing execution. Literally.
Drawn Out
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Joshua Saxon's performance is truly magnificent. He delivers the perfect tone for this type of story. You believe every line he reads. It's yet another pitch perfect narration from my favourite audiobook narrator.
It might not be for everyone, but it's well worth a listen if you want something extremely dark to try.
A modern classic.
Bleak & Disturbing Early '90s Horror Masterpiece
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The story itself is magnificent, weird, cruel and gripping. The author captures and blends the themes of struggling artists, dead end jobs and abusive relationships so skilfully.
I'll probably read this every year!
Exceptional
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