The Cat Bride: A Haunting Feminist Horror

The Cat Bride: A Haunting Feminist Horror

Book Review: The Cat Bride by Charlotte Tierney

Charlotte Tierney’s The Cat Bride is a haunting horror combined with a powerful feminist coming-of-age narrative. This is all set against the sweltering backdrop of 1995 Britain. With its eerie exploration of family secrets, bodily transformation, and the liminal chaos of teenage girlhood, this debut novel establishes Tierney as a bold new voice in literary horror.

The Cat Bride follows Lowdy, a 16-year-old convalescent forced to relocate with her mother to a decaying moorland zoo to care for her dying grandmother. Sixteen years prior, a tiger-lynx hybrid the “tynx” escaped the zoo, killed a person, and was euthanized. Now, rumours of its resurgence haunt the community, and the locals blame Lowdy’s family for the predator’s return. As Lowdy grapples with her mysterious illness, nocturnal blackouts, and her grandmother’s cryptic warnings about feeding the tynx, she uncovers a chilling truth: feral instincts may run deeper in her blood than she imagined.

Tierney effectively captures the oppressive heatwave of the ’90s, combining it with the rundown atmosphere of the zoo, which feels like a creepy throwback to happier times. This creates a wild ambience that makes you question what’s real and what’s just a nightmare. Those of us of a certain age may do a double take at the mention of Oasis, initially thinking, “Surely they were a band from the 2000s.”

Then you will take a deep sigh as you realise that yes, the 90s were thirty-odd years ago, and not the twenty years that your old brain wishes it was. And the shorts with more pockets than you can ever need will make you pause as you look down and realise that even as a man entering the later stages of middle age, you still dress the same way you did as a 25-year-old.

The moorland setting acts like its own character in-between space where the lines between humans and animals, past and present, start to blur, pushing you to face your own primal fears and desires as shadows flicker at the edges of your mind, pulling you into a tangled web of intrigue and dread.

At its essence, The Cat Bride delves into the heavy expectations placed on teenage girls, unravelling the complicated web of societal pressures and their transformation. Lowdy’s journey serves as a reflection of the tynx’s wild heritage, shedding light on the persistent fears we hold regarding female sexuality and independence. Tierney effectively weaves in themes like gaslighting, memory distortion, and inherited trauma, all through a lens of body horror that is both striking and thought-provoking, challenging us to reconsider our own identities and perceptions.

The Cat Bride introduces fresh elements that invigorate the narrative, highlighting decay in the environment and familial connections. The deteriorating zoo acts not just as a spooky setting but also symbolizes the troubled relationships among Lowdy, her secretive mother, and her quirky grandmother, illustrating how family dynamics can disintegrate alongside societal expectations. And the Moorf, we cannot talk about this novel without the brilliant warning from Lowdy’s mother about the Moors; those of us who know will smile at it. As the characters navigate their eerie circumstances, the interplay between nature and their journeys uncovers their intricate ties, encouraging readers to reflect on the concepts of monstrosity and identity in the modern world.

However, I must say that, in terms of readability, The Cat Bride was quite a challenging read for me. While I appreciated the complex way in which Tierney crafted this narrative into an almost dreamlike fugue, I often found myself pulled out of the story. This sometimes happened due to an odd choice of words, making the text feel like it was in the wrong tense for me as a dyslexic reader.

At other times, the choppy sentences and the connection of some sentences disrupted my reading flow. Nevertheless, I was so captivated by both the story and the characters that I kept reading, even when I would normally have put the book aside after the first couple of chapters. So, please stick with *The Cat Bride* if you feel the same way upon initially diving into the book because you will be rewarded with a unique and deeply intriguing story that transcends the issues I encountered.

The Cat Bride is not just a horror novel but a provocative meditation on identity and inherited violence. Tierney’s ability to balance grotesque imagery with poetic introspection makes this a standout debut. While its pacing may test some, the payoff is a story that will invoke pure cat scratch fever dreams for your subconscious to mull over for days.

The Cat Bride by Charlotte Tierney

The Cat Bride by Charlotte Tierney

The heatwave of 1995. Sixteen years since an infamous tiger-lynx hybrid escaped a small moorland zoo and ate someone. Sixteen years since the animal was euthanised. Sixteen years for the zoo to fall into disrepair. Then sixteen-year-old convalescent Lowdy, and her Mumma, are forced to move to the remote old zoo to care for her dying grandmother, and rumours surface of the animal stalking the moors again. Vengeful locals blame the three women for an apex predator on the loose.

Mumma insists all the cats are dead. Grandma whispers that the ‘tynx’ needs to be fed. Lowdy, still recovering from her own mysterious illness, begins to wonder who she can trust. Can she even trust herself when she wakes up covered in ticks with no recollection of the night before?

As Lowdy searches for the truth – the truth of her childhood, what it means to be a woman, and the truth about the cats – she realizes that something catlike that runs in the blood, something she cannot ignore. Much more than simply the wry horror of a young woman’s beastly metamorphosis, The Cat Bride views the eerie liminality of teenaged girls through a pastoral gothic fug of lairy nineties lads, booze and fags.

Further Reading

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For those passionate about horror literature, checking out this section is a must!

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The Cat Bride: A Haunting Feminist Horror

Author

  • Jim Mcleod

    Jim "The Don" Mcleod has been reading horror for over 35 years, and reviewing horror for over 16 years. When he is not spending his time promoting the horror genre, he is either annoying his family or mucking about with his two dogs Casper and Molly.

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