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B&N Reads Blog

Nightmares and Reality Merge in the Eerie Glimpse

Nightmares and Reality Merge in the Eerie Glimpse

Genre authors have employed nightmares, visions, hallucinations, and dreams to serve as woozy, off-balance plot devices, allowing their stories to get wried without necessarily making it all make sense. When done well (Bentley Little is a guy who does it quite well) the resulting vibe is akin to staggering through a house of mirrors while dizzy, a hodge-podge of prickly, not-quite-familiar sensations: weird, alien, frightening. As a reader, you find a chill running down your spine, and the sudden need to pinch yourself to make sure you’re still awake.

Our troubled lead is 24-year-old Rain Thomas, a recovering drug addict still reeling from the ramifications of an unwanted teen pregnancy and the unexpected death of the baby’s soldier father. Estranged from her well-to-do family, Rain is living shabby in a New York brownstone in a sketchy neighborhood, struggling to  keep it together. As if she wasn’t fragile enough, things go further off the rails for her on the day she imagines (or does she?) there is someone hiding in her shower. It’s just the first sign that something is off—either in the world or inside her head. A day disappears. A job interview goes horribly wrong. A pair of eyeglasses seem to reveal more than they should. People appear and vanish in an instant. A pocket watch is found inexplicably in her mailbox.

Patient Zero (Joe Ledger Series #1)

Jonathan Maberry

5

Paperback

$18.99

Ships in 1-2 days.

The twisted journeys of the characters, each flawed and scarred in unique ways, are the definition of hardscrabble. And just when you begin to settle in with Rain and her friends, the book gets weirder, introducing a fascinatingly mysterious tattooed P.I. named Monk, who has his own “special” abilities. He completely and unexpectedly rejiggers the way the story unfolds, and seems to cry out for his own spinoff.

Superbly chilling and darkly moving, Glimpse sees Maberry delivering on themes that are tough to tackle—the intersection between depression and horror—via propulsive storytelling and an unrelenting pace. I’m fairly certain I closed the covers with a clear idea of the dividing line between reality and dreams, but I left the bedroom light on a little longer, just to be sure.

Glimpse is available now.