“Sentience? I’m just a throwaway toy, an inanimate object. How can I have thought and emotion? Opinion and experience? I’d shrug my shoulders if I could. The world is brimful of mystery.”All the kids adore Doggem, the class cuddly toy.They each get to take him home. Hug him and love him and show him their world outside of school.All they have to do in return is write his diary.It’s George Gould’s … diary.
It’s George Gould’s turn and he’s going to introduce Doggem to a rather unusual family.
Before we go any further, it’s worth pointing out that both the stuffed toy and little boy are far from ordinary.
Doggem is no longer your run-of-the-mill snuggle doggy. Designed to fall apart after a few years. Perfect for squishing and squashing into a comfort blanket.
He’s a million miles from that now. Doggem has just become a living creature. Thinking and reasoning. Trying to make sense of an unexpected existence.
Strange places and scary experiences are in store during this sojourn with his latest custodian. Things no respectable fluffy dog should ever have to witness. It might end up in deadly territory.
Make no mistake, there is magic here. Some of it as black as a starless night.
And George?
Well, George is descended from decidedly dicey stock. There are folk in delightful George’s lineage who have indulged in practices of a somewhat shadowy nature. The ramifications of which aren’t ready to be consigned to history. They want to spill out of the past and have their say in the future.
DOGGEM is a spooky little tale about toy dogs and dark doings. A gently disturbing horror story. But beware, this charming cocktail of witchcraft, imagined folklore and paranormal fantasy might just bewitch you.
Not easy to pin down genre. Without doubt it has a certain heart-breaking beauty to it. Maybe it’s a modern fairytale. A scary one, flavoured with a dash of the occult, written for an adult audience. After all, fairy tales feature the supernatural and have a magical aspect to them.
They often have old cottages and eerie, unnerving woodland settings.
Wickedly enchanting women and innocent children.
Ancient evil and everyday greed.
Doggem is a short story, one in a series of sinister tales from the Dead Boxes Archive.
The Dead Boxes?
Some objects are frightening things and the Dead Boxes definitely fall into that category.
They can be easily overlooked. Ordinary on the surface. At first glance anyway. A mobile phone, a piece of art …a child’s plaything.
Take a closer look. You’ll see something unique.
You could very easily have one and not know it.
Exercise caution.
They hold miracle and mystery. Horror and salvation.
None are the same. Except in one regard.
You don’t need one.
You might think you do, but you really don’t.
Believe me.
A Short Story.
From the Dead Boxes Archive.
more
I previously read Mr. Leonard’s fun horror short Call Drops and thoroughly enjoyed it. I have seen John teasing this story on twitter and was looking forward to its release.
Now after reading it, all I can say is WOW!
Doggem is a stuffed toy that resides at a local elementary school. Our furry friend is a school project that gets to go home with a student for a short amount of time. The student gets to care for Doggem and gets to write diary entries for Doggem telling about each of his days.
While the idea is cute, it’s also a way for teachers to get a bit of an insight into how the student’s home life is. Do the parents participate? What condition does Doggem come back in? Doggem spends a moment describing just how awful life can be behind closed doors.
Now you wouldn’t be wrong to think this is a fantasy tale about a stuffed toy. Doggem though, is so much more.
We follow a boy as he goes on holidays to his grandma’s cottage, way off in the countryside. He is told that he isn’t allowed to play in the woods alone. His grandma is mysterious but the boy doesn’t mind, she takes an interest in him and in Doggem.
What John has created here, in a short novella will fill your heart with joy and sorrow in equal parts. He creates such a lush landscape in such few pages that by the end you will be surprised it wasn’t 800 pages long, and I mean that in the best way possible. This is a fairy-tale with unbridled darkness. This is a fairy-tale filled with moments of childhood sweetness and simple love. The love a stuffed toy that has come alive has for a small boy who treats him with kindness and care.
This was such an unexpected delight and I can’t wait for the literary world to read this.
Part “The Art of Racing in the Rain,” part fairy-tale, but in the end one of the finest pieces of fiction I have read in some time.
Doggem, is a short story from John F Leonard and is a tale of a toy dog and dark deeds. I chose to read this as a member of Rosie’s Book Review Team and received a copy from the author but that has not effected my review in any way.
In a bid to encourage literacy Mrs Snady encourages the pupils in her primary class to take the class toy dog, uninspiringly called Doggem, home for a week at a time. The child who has him in their possession is meant to document his time in their care. George Gould, age 5, is chosen to take him home for the whole of the summer holidays.
George’s parents, Cath and Tom, are taking him, and Doggem, to stay with his grandmother in her cottage in Jordemain Wood. However, it is clear that all is not well with the relationship between his parents and the grandmother, but she has asked to see her grandchild so the trip is on.
And this is where the story takes a darker turn as while Cath and Tom cook up a plan, a level of perception has been brought to Doggem by George’s abilities which, while hidden from his parents, have been spotted from afar by his grandmother.
Doggem gets to see and hear things he probably shouldn’t because no one suspects a toy dog and after what happens in the holidays things take an even more sinister turn when Doggem returns to school and life gets creepy for Mrs Snady as his powers increase.
This short story is very well written, thoroughly enjoyable and I’d highly recommend it to everyone who wants a fairly quick read. Excellent!
What a fun and dark short story this was!
It’s young George’s turn to take Doggem home from school over the holidays. Doggem is a cute little stuffed toy and George is excited. The one responsibility that comes along with Doggem is his diary entries. George is required to write about Doggem’s life from Doggem’s point of view over their time off. George is a little worried about that, but is proud and happy to give it a shot. He will soon discover though, that Doggem is much more than he seems to be. What will happen over the holiday? Will George be able to keep up with Doggem’s diary entries? You’ll have to read this to find out!
This is a charming little tale about George, his family, and Doggem. It didn’t spool out quite the way I expected it to, and that’s what made this bite-sized tale so much fun!
Recommended!