Skin – Ted Dekker (The Books of History Chronicles)
Series: The Books of History Chronicles
Author: Ted Dekker
Genre: Horror, Suspense
Ted Dekker likes to have the reader asking, “What’s going on?!” after they have read the first page or two. Halfway through the book, he again wants the reader to exclaim, “Wait, what is going on here?!!!!” And then, at the end, he definitely desires them to cry out, “Wait! What?! No Way! WHAT IS GOING ON HERE?!” And he definitively does so in Skin.
Skin has the basics of the horror genre, as I see them, at least. A killer at large who seems unstoppable and who appears to be able to kill whenever he so desires, which just so happens to be right now, and just about everyone he comes across. The deaths are not necessarily pretty, but Dekker does not dwell on the grisly details very much at all.
The book itself reads at the high pace which Dekker has become known for, a page-turner to the very end. Though it appears to have them in places, it doesn’t have as many fantastical elements in it as some of his other books. In my mind, the characters were intriguing and interesting, though the way they developed, in some ways, was slightly predictable. But that would have been the only predictable element of the book. I kept expecting him to take it on direction and he would twist it a different one. The climactic end was reminiscent of an M. Night Shamalayan movie – quite a twist!
As in all his books, there is no real profanity and neither are there really any sexual situations or explicit sexual encounters. There is relational tension, but that’s about it.
This book, while definitely written from a Christian perspective, carries virtually no overt Christian messages. The primary theme of the book, that everyone is “ugly” down into their hearts, is a Biblical theme, but never referenced so in the book. In this sense Skin is a more ‘secular’ book than any other of Dekker’s I have read.
The book does take place in the world of the Circle Trilogy, falling under the more general category of The Books of History Chronicles, which is the overarching literary world where The Circle Trilogy (Black, Red, and White) takes place. While not belonging to that trilogy or The Paradise Novels (Showdown, Saint, and Sinner) or The Lost Books (Chosen, Infidel, Renegade, Chaos, Lunatic, and Elyon), it does belong to the same ‘world’ and timeline as those books as well as House (written with Frank Peretti). A little confusing, but you really don’t need to have read any them to appreciate it. Dekker apparently intended it to help bridge the gap between some of those different series in the world of The Books of History Chronicles, but I haven’t read all of them so I’m not quite sure which ones. But you could buy, read, and enjoy this book without having read any of the others – I think some characters bleed over, but nothing too significant.
In the end, Skin is another excellently executed book by Ted Dekker. It’s not a necessarily ‘deep’ read, but it is very intriguing and is quite a page-turner. I highly recommend it!
Worldview: Christian
Recommended Age: High School age, primarily due to the violence/killing and some of the subject matter in the book.


very good book need more themes for it tho