Cover Image: Becoming the Boogeyman

Becoming the Boogeyman

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

Having absolutely loved the first installment in this series so much, Becoming the Boogeyman definitely had some large shoes to fill. While I overall really enjoyed the story and it kept me just as hooked as the first book, I enjoyed this one just a little bit less - but overall still a strong read. Highly recommend if you read and loved Chasing the Boogeyman!

Thank you to Netgalley and Gallery Books for my review copy!

Was this review helpful?

I feel like I"m missing something with Richard Chizmar. I've read a few books by him, including the first Gwendy book he wrote with Stephen King, and I just can't get into it the way others do. His books are highly rated, and the first Boogeyman book was pretty good, but I didn't really enjoy Becoming the Boogeyman much. It could be because it is from his POV, and I am sure there is a term for it, but it's like breaking the fourth wall. Stephen King did it in the Dark Tower series and it was weird but ok, but in Becoming the Boogeyman, I found myself not really liking the main character, who is Richard Chizmar, writing a fictional account based on fictional events, but when you aren't a fan of the main character, and the main character IS the writer, it's just not it. I gave it a 3/5 stars because it is an interesting take on it and he is a good writer.

Was this review helpful?

Wow! Going in knowing this was a work of fiction, just like Chasing the Boogeyman was, I was still on the edge of my seat throughout the entire story. Can't wait for the next installment. Hopefully it won't be too long. Thank You for the complimentary egalley in exchange for my honest review. I thoroughly enjoyed Becoming the Boogeyman.

Was this review helpful?

Chasing the Boogeyman, the first in this series, was so compelling because it felt so insanely real. I felt like I was reading something along the lines of “I’ll Be Gone in the Dark” and I was sucked it.

However, however, I think I’d have to say, I liked Becoming the Boogeyman more. Where the first felt like Richard Chizmar’s love story to his hometown and childhood, this one was built on grit, and suspense, and secrets being revealed. The stakes felt and still feel far bigger in this one.

I love the way the mixed media style works for this book so well. Including the incredible photos Chizmar manages to take on his own to make it feel more realistic.

The characters were well thought out, well-developed, especially the incredible fictional Carly.

I am here for these books and highly recommend if you like horror, serial killers, mixed media, and true crime elements blended with thriller tropes and a little police procedural action.

Was this review helpful?

I loved the first book SO much and had such expectations going into this one. I think that's why ultimately I was slightly disappointed. I did enjoy it but felt it had too much is some areas and not enough in others. There were places it dragged and could have been edited to make it flow much easier. Some things didn't need to be there to contribute to the overall plot and served as a it of a confusion.

Was this review helpful?

This author has some serious chops!! I read Chasing the Boogeyman and absolutely loved it. Mr. Chizmar seamlessly weaves fact with fiction to the point that you don't know what's real and what isn't. It's absolutely brilliant. His style of writing is immersive, captivating, and makes you jump in and not want to come up for air until it's all done. I read this in one day, which is amazing when you consider I'm "look a squirrel" distracted all the time. I cannot wait for the next installment. And there is going to be another one...right? RIGHT!?!

Was this review helpful?

The tangents, and the way the author name drops and inserts himself into the story is just not for me.

I didn’t care for book #1, but wanted to give the author another chance. Now I know.

It’s not the book, it’s me. Not every book is for every reader.

Was this review helpful?

Great sequel to Chizmar’s Chasing the Boogeyman. I love how he writes both books like an investigation. It’s super fast paced and keeps you sunk into the book. Overall a captivating read that had me engaged and desperate to see how it ended.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you to the author Richard Chizmar, publishers Gallery Books, and TLC Book Tours, for an advance paperback copy of BECOMING THE BOOGEYMAN. Thank you also to NetGalley for an accomanying widget. All views are mine.

This book is good, but not as good as the first, which I loved. I found the metafictional elements to be stronger in the first, where they are more subtle. The story didn't need the ramp up, it was just Chizmar having fun. But, you know, part of the reason writers write is because stories are really fun to create!

Three (or more) things I loved:

1. Hey, Datsuns are fun! We had a Z!

2. This is a long book, but it moves fast and, as in the last book, Chizmar's style is smooth.

3. The pacing is really good, and honestly mismatches the form.

4. I love the bits from "Chizmar's" fictional memoir, Edgewood: Looking Back. How much of this content is mined from Chizmar's actual life is impossible to tell, but it often has an authenticity that I enjoy, like the ghostly experience he shared with three friends, at loc. 2958.

Three (or less) things I didn't love:

This section isn't only for criticisms. It's merely for items that I felt something for other than "love" or some interpretation thereof.

1. Though they are the same person, the narrators are much different in tone and mood between the two books. It is literally the difference between a "Chizmar" who did not realize he was the center of everything, and the one who would have it no other way. The interview "Chizmar" and Gallagher share at loc.1049 seems to support this.

2. Given the ending, some of the content is either illogical or difficult for the reader to accept, or both, such as the conversation at loc. 2193. They're being needlessly vague with each other here; the only one who benefits from that, here, is the reader, I mean again, given what the reader learns at the end. Are the characters and narrator now aware of the reader? Because, if so...dayum.

3. It is not Stephen King's magnum opus! The Dark Tower series is!

Rating: 🪢🪢🪢🪢 plot twists
Recommend? Yes!
Finished: Dec 12 '23
Format: Advance paperback, TLC,
Read this book if you like:
🩸 horror stories
👻 ghost stories
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 family stories, family drama
🤸‍♂️ man's coming of age
🗞 true crime

Was this review helpful?

I loved the first Chasing the Boogeyman, I am happy to report that I love this sequel just as much.this one seems to touch on Ted bundy and some of the silence of the lambs style. It kept me engaged and turning the pages. He has such a way with words.

Was this review helpful?

Becoming the boogeyman picks up right where chasing the boogeyman left off and I love that in a sequel. But I feel like the excitement had worn off from his previous book and I couldn’t get into it and enjoy it like I wanted. I started it and then put it down thinking it wasn’t the right time. And then picked it back up and tried again and I think it’s just me. I didn’t enjoy the format as much and I feel like maybe this book didn’t need a sequel.

Was this review helpful?

I enjoyed Chasing the Boogeyman and I couldn't wait to see what was new in the world of Richard Chizmar!

Chizmar delivers a story with enough suspense and mystery to entertain. However, in difference to Chasing the Boogeyman, this story dragged in some areas.

I do like his winning formula of inserting himself and his life into the world where a serial killer is out to get him. Chizmar gave us enough questions, including if there was a new killer and if he was someone he already knew. Was he just following orders from someone from prison? or if a copycat was lurking on his property just to create non-stop fear.

The ending gives a perfect place for book 3 which I would read without hesitation.

Cliffhanger: Yes

3.5/5 Fangs

A complimentary copy was provided by Gallery Books via Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Richard Chizmar is back with another Boogeyman book! If you haven’t read Chasing the Boogeyman, you could read it first to see how this all began, but it isn’t completely necessary. Though I highly recommend that you do.

If you haven’t read the first book, be prepared to be sucked into the most unusual concept for a novel. It reads like a true crime novel, complete with pictures and news articles. The catch is that the author, Richard Chizmar, is in the story. He is an author, who has written about the Boogeyman and who now has a relationship with him.

The story picks up after Josh Gallagher has been sent to prison for the murders of young girls in Richard’s hometown. A copycat killer seems to be at work and he is playing mind games with Richard.

Was this review helpful?

While I think technically this could be read as a standalone, it is much more impactful if you've read the first book - Chasing the Boogeyman. If you haven't read the first book at all or if it has been a while and you need a refresher, this book does a good job of giving the events of the previous book but doesn't take too long to get into the current story.

The tension build was really great and stretched over the course of the book. I liked the constant push/pull of trying to figure out who is watching Chizmar and his family. The mystery-reader in me wanted more red herrings in the investigation, but other readers might feel differently.

We get flashbacks to Chizmar's childhood and at first I didn't think they added a lot to this particular story. However, once we get to a certain point in these flashbacks, it really added a whole new layer into the story that I wasn't expecting and absolutely loved.

Despite all my horror, thriller, and mystery reading, I've never really gotten into the true crime sphere. I am aware of the conversations around the ethics and impact of true crime and I liked how this book worked those conversations in in a natural way.

I can't wait for the third book to come out so we can

Was this review helpful?

Richard Chizmar and the Boogeyman are back. How can the Boogeyman be stalking the Chizmar family and leaving dead bodies if he's in prison?

I love the way the author writes these stories. I forget that the Boogeyman is a fictional serial killer. Chizmar has an amazing storytelling ability. I also enjoyed the Stephen King namedropping because I'm a huge King fan.

Was this review helpful?

Horror has become a new genre for me and Becoming The Boogeyman is the best example of horror. I loved book one and book two was even better. Just enough fright to get the blood jumping. Great twist and I’m looking forward to book three!
Thank you NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?

Another fantastic book by Richard Chizmar! Just as he does in Chasing The Boogeyman (book 1), Richard Chizmar has a way of mixing reality and fiction into something terrifying.

As an avid true-crime reader, what I enjoyed most about this horror novel is how believable the crimes are. Had this not been clearly labeled as a work of fiction, it could have been a true crime work of art. That takes some serious talent and skill.

The undertones of how we become obsessed with crime and evil snake through this book effortlessly. So many layers; highly recommended! It is best read after book 1, but I believe it can be read as a stand-alone.

Was this review helpful?

Richard Chizmar is back with another Boogeyman book! If you haven’t read Chasing the Boogeyman, you could read it first to see how this all began, but it isn’t completely necessary. Though I highly recommend that you do.

If you haven’t read the first book, be prepared to sucked into the most unusual concept for a novel. It reads like a true crime novel, complete with pictures and news articles. The catch is that the author, Richard Chizmar, is in the story. He is an author, who has written about the Boogeyman and who now has a relationship with him.

The story picks up after Josh Gallagher has been sent to prison for the murders of young girls in Richard’s hometown. A copycat killer seems to be at work and he is playing mind games with Richard.

Once again, I loved the way this story is told. It’s so easy to totally immerse yourself in the story. Richard Chizmar has developed a technique and it continues to shine in this second book.

Was this review helpful?

When I realized that Chasing the Boogeyman was going to get a sequel I was a little confused. Where could the story possibly go? The bad guy was caught and the ending seemed to wrap up nicely. That being said, I'm very happy that Mr. Chizmar wrote another book and explored more into the Boogeyman and what it means to write a true crime story (even if it's fiction). The second book brings back the nostalgic atmosphere and adventure with a vengeance. What a ride. I can't say much else without spoilers. Just pick up this book and go for a ride!

Was this review helpful?

Chizmar does it again, reprising his glorious faux-true crime story of small town murder.

In this genre Mashup (meta-, true crime, thriller, horror, police procedural, you name it...), Chiz finds a body on his own property. Thus restarts the spiral of Boogeyman-like killings, and we see how being thrust into this dark celebrity affects him, his town, and family and friends.

Told with stark, sometimes brutal honesty, I had to Google some facts to make sure this didn't actually happen... he was that compelling!

My thanks to NetGalley for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.

Was this review helpful?