Safe-Keeper
My avatar is not a Drumpf hat
Couple observations (yes, we're going full book club mode here):
The protagonist sits on the floor, munching day-old pizza, and tries to muster up the courage to start their day:
This repeats a theme from I'm Starting to Worry... where a character is advised to become more 'fun' and outgoing in order to get a stable relationship. He grumpily replies that (paraphrased from memory)
Another quote, from a discussion of all the myths, narratives, and conspiracy theories about the mysteries town the protagonists live in:
In other news, the book is still a lovely mix of horror/mystery and hilarious deadpan comedy. The two characters are a kind of... Mystery solvers, or supernatural fixers? Like a mix of the Scooby Doo gang, the Ghostbusters, and Mulder and Scully from the X-Files, who people come to when they need help with monsters or supernatural phenomena? To illustrate, the narrator lists three cases they recently had to attend to:
The protagonist sits on the floor, munching day-old pizza, and tries to muster up the courage to start their day:
I was miserable where I was, and I would fight anyone who tried to make me leave.
This repeats a theme from I'm Starting to Worry... where a character is advised to become more 'fun' and outgoing in order to get a stable relationship. He grumpily replies that (paraphrased from memory)
To which another character replies,it sounds like you're asking me to become a totally different person. Someone extroverted and outgoing, someone who likes to go out and do things.
Pargin has discussed something similar in TikTok videos --this whole 'if you can't handle me at my worst, you don't deserve me at my best' attitude, which at worst is just a way to avoid taking responsiblity for your actions and become a better person. This whole idea of personal betterment and taking responsibility for your life and actions seems to come up a lot in his works.Why not? You're miserable the way you are. I swear, if algorithm-driven social media had a slogan it'd be "we hate ourselves and we'll be furious with anyone who asks us to change!"
Another quote, from a discussion of all the myths, narratives, and conspiracy theories about the mysteries town the protagonists live in:
Which again resembles a thought from I'm Starting to Worry... about how we humans have an innate drive to answer questions we have no answer to even when it means making absurd leaps of logic and even making stuff up. Read by the author:Humans will twist themselves into knots rather than admitting the unknowable might be unknowable.
In other news, the book is still a lovely mix of horror/mystery and hilarious deadpan comedy. The two characters are a kind of... Mystery solvers, or supernatural fixers? Like a mix of the Scooby Doo gang, the Ghostbusters, and Mulder and Scully from the X-Files, who people come to when they need help with monsters or supernatural phenomena? To illustrate, the narrator lists three cases they recently had to attend to:
- Someone complained their dead son had started sending photos from torture chambers in Hell (they resolved this by blocking his number on her phone)
- Someone's dog had been replaced by an identical dog that would not bark but instead melodically sing "kiss my ◊◊◊◊!" (they arrived, found the dog hilarious, and kept laughing until asked to leave (by the owner, not the dog))
- Someone complained they had discovered a hole in their bedroom in which a "twitching, lecherous eye" would sometimes appear (they "sloppily spackled the hole" and took no further action)


