Review: Silver Nitrate by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Rating: 5 out of 5.

A brilliant but overlooked sound editor, Montserrat’s work behind the scenes has soured of late. Her closest friend since childhood, Tristán, is a faded soap opera star who spends his days chasing the past. When Tristán discovers that his next-door neighbor is none other than the legendary cult horror director Abel Urueta, the three form a friendship. Many years prior, Ureta was involved in a film production that was rumored to involve imbuing a kind of magic into the silver nitrate film stock, but the film was never completed. Ureta claims this is the reason his career went downhill, and he implores the pair to assist him in completing the final scene. But as Tristán and Montserrat dig deeper, they are drawn into a complicated history of Nazi occultism – a shadowed figure stalks Montserrat, and Tristán is plagued by the appearance of his deceased ex-girlfriend. The more they seek to discover the truth of the lost film, the more likely that magic and sorcery are entangled with filmmaking than they ever could have realized, and they’ll have to break the cycle to survive the consequences.

Silvia Moreno-Garcia transports readers to the silver screen with a heart-pounding thriller that subtly blends the history of cinema with a deep dive into Mexican horror and Nazi occultism. Following two childhood friends as they attempt to unravel a decades-old curse while navigating strange new powers, Moreno-Garcia slowly entangles readers in an age-old struggle with occultism and the powers vying for control. When I first read about Silvia’s newest thriller, I was more than ready to navigate curses and brave new horrors to experience a new book from one of my favorite authors. Silver Nitrate gradually drives the knife in, with a slow-building narrative that never quite makes you feel on solid ground. There is something uniquely cinematic captured here, as we are taken deep into the history of silver nitrate film and the dark magic unfortunately caught up in it. What I’ve come to love about Moreno-Garcia’s work is the historical contexts woven into every one of her stories. Silver Nitrate explores everything from Mexican horror, to movie production, and occultism, and it was all so fascinating to follow. Silvia slowly envelops readers in this world and its characters, jaded sound editor Montserrat, and her childhood friend and soap opera star Tristan, as they delve deep into the past and find unexpected horrors. Montserrat is everything I love about women horror protagonists, a jaded introvert with an unexpected cutting edge. As always, there’s a tidbit of romance present that uplifts the story and plays into the cinematic feel. With her latest, Silvia Moreno-Garcia deftly plots a sound editor’s entanglement with a fabled nitrate film that reaps unintended consequences on all those involved. Silver Nitrate has all the feels of a cult classic with a unique historical context. It’s everything I love about Silvia and her best novel yet!

Thank you to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing this arc in exchange for an honest review.

Trigger warnings: blood, death, murder, drug abuse, racism, xenophobia

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