Tor Nightfire Most Anticipated Horror Books
"Christopher Golden’s Road of Bones is tightly wound, atmospheric, and creepy as hell. It will take you to a place you’ve never been before, and the trip will scare the hell out of you. I loved it." —Stephen King
"Golden, an economical writer, creates a mother lode of terror in just over 200 pages.... Shamans and spirits, the undead and the feral, the creatures of the Kolyma Highway and the unimaginable horrors of its history make for riveting reading." —The New York Times Book Review
"Two men willing to risk their lives for a last-chance reality TV pitch find themselves on a white-knuckle hell ride on Siberia's infamous Kolyma Highway. Road of Bones is unrelenting and will chill you to your core." —Paul Tremblay, New York Times Bestselling author
"[A] horror-thriller hybrid that will chill even the most jaded readers...Give to fans of emotional, thought-provoking, nature inspired horror like The Only Good Indians (2020) by Stephen Graham Jones or Wonderland (2020) by Zoje Stage." —Booklist (starred)
"The road is long, the night is cold, and there’s terror at every pullout, nothing but dread between. Just try and put this book down, I dare you.” —Stephen Graham Jones, bestselling author of The Only Good Indians
"A slash in reality, or what we mistakenly assume is the real, exposing not only extrinsic horrors but those within, all found in a corner of the globe that has long held our fascination, though most of us don’t have the courage to make the trek. Golden has that courage. Road of Bones is a masterclass in mind-set and setting; I’ve never felt the temperature of a book so firmly. I’ve also never been so afraid to step outside. In some ways a quick story (the central events span much less than 24 hours), in other ways enormous: the emotional stakes could not be higher. A breathtaking experience, a glacial gust of a book, Christopher Golden’s best yet." –Josh Malerman, New York Times best selling author of Bird Box and Goblin.
"Road of Bones is wonderful! The frozen waste is so vividly rendered, I felt the biting cold in my own bones and drew breath with the characters as they fought for survival against the vastness of nature. Gripping, eerie and ultimately beautiful. It’s a breakneck speed adventure, with so much soul at its heart.” —Catriona Ward, author of The Last House on Needless Street
“I don’t know how else to say it. This book is scary as f***. Do not read alone in the dark.” —New York Times Bestselling author Catherynne M. Valente
“This book is legit great. Golden is the master of what I think of as ‘adventure horror.’ People in strange places and extreme situations meeting terror at the edges of the world. Road of Bones is scary as hell and does not fuck around.” —Chuck Wendig, New York Times bestselling author of Wanderers and The Book of Accidents
"Damn. Road of Bones is a relentless nightmare, part terrifying fable, part fever dream, set in the perpetual claustrophobic darkness of a Siberian landscape that’s cold enough to crack bones." —Eric Rickstad, New York Times Bestselling author
"You know you're reading a Christopher Golden horror joint when you signed up for a horror novel, that's why you're here, but when the bad shit starts you're like, 'wait, can I shift genres to something where these guys just get to have a nice road trip and everything's okay?'" —Seanan McGuire
"Road of Bones is thrilling and relentless, with a wild and unsettling heart. It’s a nonstop drive into terror, and you won’t want to stop." –Meg Gardiner, author of the UNSUB novels
"A chilling... supernatural thriller best read by the fireplace." —Kirkus Reviews
"An essential read for horror and supernatural thriller fans." — Library Journal (Starred)
"Golden is writing at the top of his game." —Publishers Weekly (starred)
2021-11-10
An American producer eager to score a big hit like Duck Dynasty travels to Siberia to shoot a reality series along the desolate Kolyma Highway and gets more thrills than he bargained for.
At first, the only obstacle for Felix Teigland and Prentiss, his British cameraman, friend, and investor, is the 40-below temperature. A young guide's introduction to the legendary Road of Bones, beneath which hundreds of thousands of gulag prisoners are buried, gives Teig a great subject as well as a great title for his series. But no sooner have they arrived than the filmmakers are threatened—and worse—by shadowy wolf creatures and a screaming humanoid spirit who has something to do with the sudden abandonment of a town by everyone except a strangely possessed 9-year-old girl Teig becomes determined to save. He is still tormented by the abduction and murder of his younger sister when they were little. Meanwhile, Ludmilla, a frail but determined old woman, travels the frigid Kolyma Highway to bless the buried—a self-appointed task that has cost her several fingers and toes. The ability of the "murderous air" to immobilize people comes and goes, the cuddlier forest animals seem on loan from a Disney cartoon, and Ludmilla's devotion to Bruce Springsteen is a bit much. But Golden is great at atmosphere. The desolate surroundings are indeed "a stark reminder of how small a thing it was to be a human being." And how can you resist the charms of a 50-foot-tall reindeer woman?
A chilling, if sometimes silly, supernatural thriller best read by the fireplace.