Edmonton Journal

Mysteries throw history into the mix

- — Jenni fe r Kay , The Associated Press

Day Four

For all the popularity of cruises, there are some things about them that scare people: close quarters with lots of other people, the threat of catching the gastrointe­stinal illness norovirus on-board and the distance from land if anything goes wrong.

Sarah Lotz plays up those fears in her novel about an otherworld­ly cruise, Day Four.

A swiftly spreading virus? Check. Broken engines that stall the ship beyond cellphone range? Check. A rowdy bunch of hard-partying Brits who might get everyone cut off from the booze? Yes. There’s also a psychic who’s really a scam artist, and a storm’s on the way.

And then things get worse, as in end-of-the-world worse. It all goes down off the coast of Florida, because where else would the apocalypse strike? If that’s what is even happening to the cruise ship The Beautiful Dreamer.

Day Four is a loose followup to Lotz’s debut novel, The Three, which followed three spooky children who survived seemingly unrelated commercial plane crashes.

The confined space of the cruise ship is the perfect setting for Lotz’s suspensefu­l style. Once things start to go wrong, Day Four is a pageturner and fun for readers with easy access to the plumbing, fresh food, hand sanitizers and sanity that Lotz’s characters lack while the creepiness builds.

It’s when the ship drifts into supernatur­al waters that Day Four stalls, mired in too many possible explanatio­ns for the horrors.

If it’s the journey and not the destinatio­n that matters, Day Four is a fun trip. A voyage into hell, though, should actually end somewhere.

 ??  ?? Day Four Sarah Lotz Little, Brown & Co.
Day Four Sarah Lotz Little, Brown & Co.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada