Soon

Lois Murphy

Book - 2019

On winter solstice, the birds disappeared, and the mist arrived. The inhabitants of Nebulah quickly learn not to venture out after dark. But it is hard to stay indoors: cabin fever sets in, and the mist can be beguiling, too. Eventually only six remain. Like the rest of the townspeople, Pete has nowhere else to go. After he rescues a stranded psychic from a terrible fate, he's given a warning: he will be dead by solstice unless he leaves town - soon.

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Subjects
Genres
Horror fiction
Paranormal fiction
Historical fiction
Published
London, England : Titan Books, a division of Titan Publishing Group Ltd 2019.
Language
English
Main Author
Lois Murphy (author)
Item Description
"First published in Australia by Transit Lounge Publishing 2017" -- title page verso
Physical Description
331 pages ; 21 cm
ISBN
9781789092356
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Murphy's striking debut explores the effects of leaving your home behind. Pete's hometown of Nebulah was once a thriving small town, but now it is a desolate, and frightening place to be. After the sun goes down, a dangerous mist flows in, making anyone caught in it disappear. There is a sense of creeping dread as the novel progresses, particularly after Pete meets Alex, a woman with psychic powers who warns him that he must leave town or face horrible things, including the possibility of death. Pete's character is hard to identify with at times he is deeply flawed and apathetic, but he eventually faces his demons. Though it may be too timid for some horror readers, Soon will appeal to Stephen King fans thanks to the picture Murphy paints of a small town left behind to rot in isolation. Readers will be glued to their seats, turning pages until the novel's shocking and yet somehow expected conclusion.--Carrie Rasak Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

The residents of a tiny, isolated town in the Australian outback are haunted by a malevolent force in this wonderfully taut novel, which is laced from start to finish with creeping dread. Every evening as the sun sets, the streets of Nebulah fill with a strange mist that swirls with terrible visions of the dead and dying. Only locked doors and windows keep the mist at bay until dawn comes--and those who linger outside are murdered, their bodies never found, their forms added to the specters in the mist come dark the next day. Aging former cop Pete is one of the last stubborn holdouts in what has become a ghost town, with most residents either disappeared into the mist or fled to safer climes. Despite strict habits of vigilance--being indoors by dark, locking doors and windows, and clustering together at night--the survivors' numbers are rapidly whittled down by suicide, surrender, and slip-ups until only Pete and his closest friend, retired schoolteacher Milly, remain. Murphy deploys sharp, fluent prose and a skillful command of atmospheric terror to tell a story that gets at the heart of real horror: the very human emotions of regret, loneliness, despair, yearning for home, and having nowhere to go. Readers who appreciate subtle horror grounded in human failings will appreciate the buildup and maintenance of tension through this book, as well as the fateful ending, which successfully drives home that same vulnerable humanity. (Oct.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A tiny Australian town is beset by a nightly horror-filled mist in Murphy's debut.The town of Nebulah was a small but bustling town until nine months ago, on the winter solstice, when the mist appeared. Now the population has dwindled to six, the last remaining stragglers who have nowhere to go coming together in the evenings to keep each other safe. Pete was once a police officer and relies on that experience to help keep everyone together and in contact with the nearest town as his group slowly whittles itself to nothing. When a young girl and self-proclaimed psychic shows up at his door one night, sheltering with him from the storm of nightmares outside, she implores him to leave town before the coming solstice, or it will be the end. Her words ring in his ears as he spends the coming months trying to figure out how to convince the last remaining townspeople to leave with him. With a similar energy and frantic dread as that found in Josh Malerman's Bird Box, Murphy has constructed a world in which the idea of a town plagued by an actual calamity that is somehow ignored by the outside world is completely believable. To complicate the question of why the residents don't just leave, Murphy subtly builds a secondary monster in the state benefits system that traps these lower-income townspeople in place without the money to rescue themselves. The juxtaposition of the legitimate terror in the town and the residents' cool treatment from the rest of the country, emphasized by a scene of Pete visiting his estranged daughter, only adds to the uneasiness of the book. The seductive monsters are almost more inviting than the outside world.A solid new entry into the horror scene filled with anxiety and dread. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.