So, I’m not averse to a little retail therapy, as the saying goes, and given the week that just transpired, I decided to do exactly that. And it’s pretty standard that my kind of retail therapy is, well, books. Books comfort me. I like to be surrounded by them. Obviously, I also like to read them because, that’s the point. (Except when they’re just there in a tower, an obesisk of unread books, serving as a totem to whatever STORY GOD you worship.)
And I thought, hey, maybe you want some books, too. It won’t fix anything, not out there, not in the world. But maybe books fix a little something inside ourselves. One brick returned to a crumbling wall.
As such, hey, I’mma give some books away.
See, I have an ARC (advanced reader’s copy) of The Staircase in the Woods and I’d sure like to send it to one of you.
And I’ll send some other books, too. Whatever I have lying around. Might be some random stuff — I’ll definitely throw in a copy of Gentle Writing Advice and You Can Do Anything, Magic Skeleton, but also some other fictiony bits too. Not sure what I’ve got on the shelves but expect a box of books to come your way if you win.
I’ll sign ’em! Personalize ’em too if you want.
The way to enter is easy: just go into the comments below, and leave a comment with a book recommendation. You must leave the title and author name, at least. You’re free, but not required, to also leave more of a comment as to why you liked it or whatever. It’ll be nice to share the book love.
Share some book love, maybe get some books.
I pay shipping, you pay nothing.
Caveat here is, it’s open to US folks only. I know, I want to do international, but the shipping is high, and the chance to lose a package is also higher than domestic, and that would be sad for everyone. So, US only, I’m afraid.
I’ll run this till Friday, November 15th, 9AM EST. I’ll pick a winner randomly, and will send the books out in the following week.
Sound fair?
COOL.
All right. You know the drill. Get to the comments. Leave a book recommendation (title, author), you might get some cool books (including Staircase!) from yours truly.
Okay bye.
Jen says:
Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman. Scared the shit out of me. I started reading it in the evening, could not put it down, and finished in the wee hours, terrified out of my mind…
November 9, 2024 — 4:52 PM
Steve says:
This is awesome, thanks for the opportunity!
I’ve been recommending Ali Seay’s I THINK I’M ALONE NOW since I’ve read it. The only caveat I highly suggest is not reading any reviews on it. None. A vast majority absolutely ruin part of the book. Just go in completely blind.
November 9, 2024 — 5:02 PM
Harold says:
I just finished reading the Cradle Series from Will Wight. Complete escapist fantasy that just let me not pay attention to the world around for the weeks before the election.
November 9, 2024 — 5:02 PM
Hook says:
This is fun! My recommendation is a a book I read that caught me off guard. Sacre Bleu, by Christopher Moore. I enjoy Moore’s writing and story building, but this story took me by surprise, taking a period in art, and the artists, to create a fantastical murder mystery. Not his normal voice. Enjoy!
November 9, 2024 — 5:04 PM
Aric Peterson says:
The hardcover of that is beautiful. If you have not read it, give his “The Stupidest Angel” a try. I listen to the audiobook edition often around Christmas time.
November 9, 2024 — 5:13 PM
Dana Schuman says:
Christopher Moore is a treasure. Love his books!
November 9, 2024 — 5:32 PM
Dennis says:
Christopher Moore is one of my must-reads—”Lamb: The Gospel According to Biff, Christ’s Childhood Pal” was my gateway drug there. I’m glad to see he’s got a new one coming, and this one features Gustav Klimt, although I don’t know that it ties to “Sacre Bleu” yet.
November 9, 2024 — 6:22 PM
Aric Peterson says:
I suggested “The Beasts of Valhalla” by George C. Chesbro and then received an email link for your newsletter. WordPress seems to have a problem with the Brave browser unfortunately.
November 9, 2024 — 5:06 PM
Toby Thomas says:
Hi! I just started the Quiet Room by Terry Miles, which is the follow up to his debut novel, Rabbits. It’s an incredibly intricate story about reality and the way it shapes perceptions—with a sprinkling in of addressing mental illness—and also a bit of time manipulation if I’m putting it all together correctly. There is also a podcast for the first book which does a fantastic job of really building Miles’ world up around you. I’d call it a thrill if I were being generic, but it’s a lot more psychological than most traditional thrillers, with some very fun and imaginative horror aspects.
If you’re more in a classic mood, I also just finished Stephen King’s book, Cell! It’s an older one and follows a nontraditional end-of-the-world, zombie apocalypse tale. King’s take on the typical “man eats man” apocalypse is refreshing, and there’s something about how he writes his characters with absolutely no remorse that really inspires my own writing. I openly admit I’m not usually the biggest fan of his work, but this one is foundational for me in not only understanding the fundamentals of storytelling, but also the vital lesson of how to KEEP HOPE ALIVE when a story hits its lowest point, plot-wise.
November 9, 2024 — 5:07 PM
Nancy says:
Published in 2000, by Ace Books and written by Louise Marley, The Terrorists of Irustan is an excellent science fiction novel. It is also an outstandingly feminist one, and will forever live on my bookshelf. So memorable that it has inhabited my mind for 24 years, and I still have “emotion” & “feels” thinking about it, especially today.
Another book of more recent vintage that I also loved was The Women Could Fly, by Megan Giddings, 2022, by Amistad, which I believe is an imprint of Harper Collins.
Both are painful and joy-filled and thoughtful.
November 9, 2024 — 5:12 PM
DJ Brouillard says:
I highly recommend “Never Say You Can’t Survive” by Charlie Jane Anders. It is the most appropriate book for the everything going on/on fire/about to happen.
November 9, 2024 — 5:20 PM
Schix says:
Very much enjoyed Guillotine by Delilah S. Dawson this year. Might even be a cathartic read in light of current events.
November 9, 2024 — 5:32 PM
Dana Schuman says:
My recommendation is North American Lake Monsters by Nathan Ballingrud. One of the best short story collections I’ve ever read.
November 9, 2024 — 5:33 PM
Wendy A. says:
I’m hooked on the Shane Ryan novels by Ron Ripley. Start with the Berkley Street series (book 1 is Berkley Street) and follow a bad-ass ghost hunting ex-marine kick some serious spirit butt! Fun, creepy, lots of action, these books take me out of my worried brain and put me in a world where I can cheer on the good guy.
November 9, 2024 — 5:37 PM
Hayden says:
I’m so in (and so looking forward to recommendations on stuff from fellow fans-of-Wendig). From a “does your heart good” perspective, Seanan McGuire’s “Wayward Children” series. Portal fantasy that likes to tug at the heartstrings, with something new waiting behind every door. From a “not exactly new, but it feels like it should be better known” side of the street, “Unamerica” by Cody Goodfellow. A dark, satirical, batshit rollercoaster ride through a dystopian future. Cheers!
November 9, 2024 — 5:41 PM
Anastasia says:
Freedom and Necessity by Steven Brust and Emma Bull.
This is a Victoriana epistolary novel set right after the revolutions of 1848. It has a High Magic and Masonic mystery at its heart and all of the characters are running around trying to solve the mystery while reporting to each other via letter. They discuss everything, including a pretty good primer on Hegelian dialectics. Okay, it might not be for everyone but it’s amazing for the right person. I buy books compulsively and I’m a believer in intuitive reading – the right book at the right time. This was on my TBR pile for a long time but is now a comfort read.
If any of you have an adventurous young reader who’s willing to try something older I’d like to recommend The Perilous Gard by Elizabeth Marie Pope. It’s a loose retelling of Tam Lin set in the Elizabethan period that features the fairy folk of the old religion, a smart and resourceful heroine and one of the best endings ever. The hero is one of my first experiences with a boyfriend who was a fictional character, lol. It won the Newberry back in the day. Sophisticated and interesting enough for an adult to read along.
November 9, 2024 — 5:48 PM
Jeanne L Collier says:
Read The September House (Carissa Orlando) to prep for spooky season and it did not disappoint! So much creepy stuff going on and (the best part) I spent so much time wondering if it was real or mental illness or projected trauma. Love it when a book leaves me guessing!
November 9, 2024 — 6:02 PM
Dennis says:
I recently re-read Frank Herbert’s “The White Plague” (a molecular biologist unleashes a new plague in response to witnessing his family being killed in an IRA bombing, and all that ensues afterwards) and would heartily recommend it.
November 9, 2024 — 6:17 PM
Elizabeth Ragavanis says:
I just bought several books on this thread!!!! I love book recommendations from other readers!
Two books I really enjoyed recently that aren’t already on this list:
Winterset Hollow by Jonathan Durham – this is tense, and horror, but magic too. Saying less so it isn’t spoiled for you.
The Wager by David Grann – nonfiction written like fiction, about a shipwreck and the dynamics of the survivors, during a time when ships were common transportation and war was regular and naval. David Grann wrote Killers of the Flower Moon. I wouldn’t have chosen this myself, it was a recommendation from another reader, for which I am grateful!
November 9, 2024 — 6:23 PM
Phoebe says:
The Eight by Katherine Neville
Great adventure story to get lost in.
November 9, 2024 — 8:23 PM
Zeke Springer says:
A RAGE OF DRAGONS by Evan Winter. This book takes place in an Afrocentric fantasy world where people can summon dragons to fight for them. Don’t get it twisted, they can’t ride them, they can only summon them to mentally control them. Also, a young man goes on a path of vengeance that slowly tearing him apart, but his mission happens to merge with his knowledge his kingdom has been betrayed from within! The action is detailed and top-notch. The characters are fully realized and relatable. The pacing is quick and smooth. You won’t be able to put it down. And when you get to the end, you’ll want to immediately pick up the sequel THE FIRES OF VENGEANCE.
November 9, 2024 — 6:37 PM
Judy Dorfner says:
Well Chuck, I have to admit that though I have subscribed to and, love your blog, I have never actually read one of your books. Now would be a good time to begin…no?
November 9, 2024 — 6:39 PM
Staci says:
I highly recommend “Let’s Move the Needle” by Shannon Downey (the person behind Badass Cross Stitch). It’s an activism handbook created as a resource for creative types–however you define that for yourself–and aims to help folks build community around creating things. She is an awesome person and worth a follow on whatever social media you can stomach these days if nothing else.
November 9, 2024 — 6:41 PM
Destiny says:
“On Tyranny” by Timothy Snyder. A compact book of 20 chapters with sound advice on how to deal with authoritarianism. Everyone should get this book while they still can.
Another book that I’m absolutely loving is
“Freeing the Turkeys” by Laura Lentz.
It’s a book of autobiographical essays that are breathtakingly beautiful. A wonderfully strange combination of hope, grief, humor, courage, and inspiration. Her writing is genuine brilliance.
Here’s an excerpt from the first thing I ever read from Laura. I was hooked. And all of her writing is this damn good:
“My boyfriend had been dead four minutes and I was asleep when he my nudged my arm. Baby, he said, I have something to tell you.
Oh, God, I said, seeing him on the edge of my bed, knowing there was a snowstorm between us…knowing he was sick, and of course just KNOWING what this could possibly mean.
This can’t be good, I said out loud – and then the phone rang and really woke me up. His daughter told me, in between sobs, that he had died in the middle of the snowstorm that had kept us apart, and in a moment I was the wife answering the door, the widow without a ring on Christmas morning.
After his funeral, where people I had never met lined up for blocks, wrapping around a small church he never attended – when my friends were getting high in the living room of Virginia’s apartment, I went to lay down, and that’s when he came to me again, gently waking me up, his hand on my forearm.
Music was playing in the other room, the notes gently sliding under my bedroom door – Talking Heads singing same as it ever was, while my friends laughed and cried in the background.
Baby, he said, with his ocean eyes – I have some things to tell you…”
Full essay at:
https://www.facebook.com/Laura.Lentz.6
November 9, 2024 — 6:49 PM
Paul Rehac says:
Just came from the World Fantsay Con with an butload of books… A couple that stand out so far are
P Djeli Clark – A Master of Djinn – Alt World Cairo with steam powered magic/technology. A great combination of Alladin and Sherlock Holmes, a cool mystery and magic maguffins. Loved this story.
Sam Kyung Yoo – Small Gods of Calamity – A new author and a totally radical genre I am choosing to call Cozy Cthulhu – another very cool detective story with unnamable horrors and a found family. I loved this novella.
Finally, my favorite non-Wendig book of the last ten years or so…
Daniel Nayeri – Everything Sad is Untrue – one of the most original modern takes on Scheherazade I have ever read. It is a beautiful story of a young boy who comes to America as a refugee from terror… poignant, hilarious, and heartbreaking.
November 9, 2024 — 6:52 PM
Aileen says:
I’m going to recommend a comfort read. A Night in the Lonesome October by Roger Zelazny. I read it every October and I always find something new that I missed before. When I was younger I had missed some of the references, and I get more of them as the years pass. It never fails to entertain and comfort.
November 9, 2024 — 7:04 PM
Teal Chimblo Fyrberg says:
Oh, have I got a book for you. Where I End, by Sophie White. Remote Irish island (which is a character unto itself), female body horror the likes of which you will not have seen before (I don’t think), gorgeous writing. Sophie is one of my new favorite authors and this book got me through this hell week somehow. I read it whilst wearing my Art Harder Muther F*cker shirt, which also helped.
November 9, 2024 — 7:06 PM
Beth Fullerton says:
I just read Old Country by Matt & Harrison Query. It is the story of a young couple who purchase a piece of property & find it is more than they bargained for.
I don’t want to give anything away, but I will say that it is one I didn’t expect to like, but a friend sent it to me & I really couldn’t put the dang thing down.
It is so well written & keeps you engaged from beginning to end. I absolutely loved it!
I’m so glad my friend sent it to me.
November 9, 2024 — 7:06 PM
Amy K Drees says:
I am currently enjoying The Infinite Miles by Hannah Fergesen. The last horror book I loved was a collection of short stories called Bestiary of Blood edited by Jamal Hodge. As far as books I actually enjoyed and would still share with my mom’s reading club, The Night Watch by Jayne Anne Phillips hits all the feeIs of historical romance without dumbing down the history bit. Bonus that it occurs primarily at the Trans-Allegheny Lunatic Asylum, one of my favorite places. I am reading constantly lately for all the reasons.
November 9, 2024 — 7:16 PM
Sarah says:
I would love to recommend Never Whistle at Night edited by Shane Hawk. It’s a dark fiction anthology of indigenous authors and has a few recognizable names but is largely meant to promote new voices. It is one of the best books I read in the past couple years.
November 9, 2024 — 7:24 PM
Mully says:
Come Closer by Sara Gran. A terrifying delectable read that speaks to me deeply.
November 9, 2024 — 7:26 PM
Betsy says:
Mully, I love Gran so much that I bought the re-issue of COME CLOSER, even though I must be careful & use the library for many books now. These posts are so much fun because somehow it’s heartening to hear other people are reading—and reading things that have spoken to me as well. Peace—
November 10, 2024 — 10:08 AM
Frances Mary D'Andrea says:
I just finished the trio of books by Claire North telling the aftermath of the Trojan War on Ithaca—but from the point of view of Penelope. They were excellent. They are Ithaca, House of Odysseus, and The Last Song of Penelope. Absolutely love this series!
November 9, 2024 — 7:51 PM
Stacy Schwartz says:
Anything by Jason Pargin aka David Wong – “John Dies at the End” is a weird, weird, wonderful story you can get lost in – it’s sequels are even stranger – especially the one with all the spiders. Yipes!
My buddy Andrea Swensson wrote a lovely book about Minneapolis musician Cornbread Harris which is heartwarming and perfect. It’s a reminder that things will be ok – even if it takes a while. The book is called “Deeper Blues.” It’s a quick read.
November 9, 2024 — 7:52 PM
Peter R Marsh says:
This is an awesome offer! Coincidentally, I am listening to the audiobook for The Kick-Ass Writer, right now, while I drive around for work. I finished The Blade Itself, by Joe Abercrombie a few weeks ago, and now I am reading its sequel, Before They Are Hanged. I just really love the POV characters, and the world they live in.
November 9, 2024 — 7:55 PM
Kathleen says:
The Ghost That Ate Us by Daniel Kraus. Picked this up at Tattered Cover in Denver on vacation based on a staff recommendation. Funny, ridiculous, and creepy. What a great recommendation! I also really loved Diavola by Jennifer Marie Thorne. Laugh out loud funny!
November 9, 2024 — 8:05 PM
Wendy says:
JCM Berne’s Hybrid Helix series is great, escapist fun!
November 9, 2024 — 8:28 PM
DJ says:
Damn, Chuck. Couldn’t make this easy, could you? And if this is some kind of subliminal fishing expedition, too bad! I can’t possibly pick one, but I’ll try to keep it under control:
Horror: House of Leaves, Mark Danielewski. There’s so much hidden shiz in this tome, it’ll take you months to uncover it all. (Runner-up: The Stand, Stephen King)
Mystery/Thriller: Shadow Man, Cody McFadyen. This may be the only book that has ever made me gasp aloud. (Runners-up: Silence of the Lambs, Thomas Harris & The Alienist, Caleb Carr) Bonus (and shameless plug): Chaos, DJ Schuette.
Fiction: Matka, Sarah Hanley. I’m not just saying it because I did the editing; Sarah is one of the most talented authors I’ve ever read. She’s an absolute master of simile and metaphor. (Runner-up: The Shadow of the Wind, Carlos Ruiz Zafon)
Sci-fi/Fantasy: The Lord of the Rings trilogy, J. R. R. Tolkien. (Runner-up: The Mists of Avalon, Marion Zimmer Bradley)
YA: The Talisman, Stephen King & Peter Straub. TBH, this could be classified in damn near any genre: horror, sci-fi, YA, fiction, fantasy…but I don’t read a lot of YA, so this is what you get. I sometimes can’t remember my last…um, what was I saying?…but I won’t ever forget Travellin’ Jack. (Runner-up: Swan Song, Robert McCammon)
Non-fic: Devil in the White City, Erik Larson. I’ve recommended this book at least a few hundred times; I have yet to have anyone tell me they didn’t enjoy it. (Runner-up?: On Writing, Stephen King—killyourdarlingsgoddammit!)
Kids: The Lion, the Witch, and the Wardrobe, C.S. Lewis. (Runners-up: Call of the Wild, Jack London & Charlotte’s Web, E. B. White.)
Happy reading!
November 9, 2024 — 8:31 PM
Mila says:
I would like to recommend books by Karin Nordin.
Where Ravens Roost and Last One Alive are a pair.
Sweet Little Lies
And her newest one is The Man in Room Seven (only on Kindle in the US currently)
November 9, 2024 — 10:19 PM
Nicole Overmoyer says:
I can’t recommend just one book so (and I’m a historical fiction reader at heart, so my favorites skew that way) –
“The Guncle” by Steven Rowley (my most recent new favorite, probably because it’s so funny and laughing is healing)
“Birdsong” by Sebastian Faulks (if you want a book to break your heart, this WWI historical fiction had me sobbing)
“A Thread of Grace” by Mary Doria Russell (my most re-read book of all time, if you know me, you know I try to get you to read this WWII novel set in Italy that is everything)
“The Agnes Browne Trilogy” by Brendan O’Carroll (a sentimental set of short books because they made me laugh… and they made my grandparents laugh & I got to bond with my grandparents over them before I lost my grandparents)
None of these are the sci-fi, fantasy, supernatural, etc. I know but… I’m just learning to really love those books even though I’ve read a lot of Stephen King and Chuck Wendig.
November 9, 2024 — 8:33 PM
Kate N says:
My all time favorite book is Small Gods by Terry Pratchett, but The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North is also amazing. The first is a remarkably fun religious satire and the second is a great time-loop-ish one. I’d recommend scouting by both authors, honestly. Thanks for the giveaway, and big hugs, Chuck.
November 9, 2024 — 8:53 PM
Ray Wegner says:
Just finished American Rapture by CJ Leede and it was FANTASTIC. A novel about a sex zombie pandemic that makes people question their moral and religious values really hit home this week. So good.
November 9, 2024 — 9:13 PM
John A says:
Writing and Selling the Mystery Novel
Hallie Ephron
Judging from all the books about writing I have, I SHOULD be way better than I am!
But this is one of the best I have found on mystery writing.
November 9, 2024 — 9:18 PM
groovybrieflyad21cfb277 says:
Book recommendations? I enjoy reading them, so why not provide a few. I’m currently on my 50th book of the year, Stephen King’s You Like It Darker. (I recommend it but what fun is a bestseller rec!) Of the books I read this year, the top recommendation would be Small Mercies by Dennis Lehane. Another really good one was Chestnut Man by Soren Sveistrup. Of course, I revisit a few oldies each year, my favorite this year being William Goldman’s Marathon Man, which I hadn’t read in decades. In the horror-ish genre, I recommend Boys in The Valley by Philip Fracassi and (to a lesser extent) Red Rabbit by Alex Grecian. Not a great book but a good one and quite unique. Lastly, I’d like to recommend an old title that is often overlooked: Falling Angel by William Hjortsberg. Maybe I should give it a reread.
John (Jack)
November 9, 2024 — 9:22 PM
groovybrieflyad21cfb277 says:
How did I get the name GroovyBrieflyAD21CFB277 attached to my post? I’m obviously out of my element here.
John (Jack)
November 9, 2024 — 9:25 PM
Jayne says:
Going back to some comfort reads: The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Adddison, and Nation by Terry Pratchett
November 9, 2024 — 10:50 PM
Tom Crepeau says:
Little noticed, Patricia Wrede releasted Marelon the Magician to the fantasy crowd. Didn’t mention that Marelon and its sequel, Magician’s Ward, are wonderful fantasy AND TERRIFIC ROMANCE. I didn’t notice it was a romance for many years, it’s so good as a fantasy adventure. Also, she and Caroline Stevermer had a letter game they wrote up as a novel, Cecily and Sorcery, or the Enchanted Chocolate Pot, and then two sequels. I reread these at least every year. -tc
November 10, 2024 — 12:14 AM
Hemant Nayak says:
I recommend the kick as writer by Chuck Wendig – can’t count the number of times I’ve enjoyed listening to this on Audio – “you are the dealer, the character is the drug!”
November 10, 2024 — 12:47 AM
AnnieColleen says:
Oddly enough I was just pulling together recommendations somewhere else… The book I’m reading at the moment is Naomi Novik’s short fiction collection Buried Deep and Other Stories. Warm-hearted stories that still have some bite to them, including the short story “Spinning Silver” that she later turned into a novel.
November 10, 2024 — 12:51 AM
Bruce Berls says:
Nick Harkaway is earning much praise for his new book Karla’s Choice, written in the voice of his dad John Le Carre, and he deserves more attention for an earlier novel, Angelmaker, a very funny cross-genre romp that makes me laugh quite a lot. But it’s not well known that Harkaway wrote two books under a pseudonym, Aidan Truhen, with first person narration by a hilarious antihero. The Price You Pay features over the top outrageous acts of violence and the narrative voice of Jack Price is a wonder. The Aidan Truhen books are for a special niche audience that, say, might laugh out loud when a severed head is fired from a grapefruit cannon into another bad guy, killing him messily – but that niche audience will find them quite wonderful.
November 10, 2024 — 1:13 AM
Luk says:
I’m from Belgium, so you don’t have to enter me in the giveaway, but wanted to leave a book recommendation nonetheless.
Stories of your life and others, by Ted Chiang. It’s a compilation of short stories. I’m usually not a fan of short stories, because the story is over before you really get sucked in. But these were a nice surprise. Every story is based on such a unique idea and thought out so well, it’s a real treat and I would recommend it to anyone.
November 10, 2024 — 2:24 AM
Sebastian says:
For something that’s beautiful and lyrical and will just make you happy as you read it, I’m always pushing The Starless Sea from Erin Morgenstern on people. It is one of my go-to wonderful novels, plus it’s got BEES.
Also exquisite is Robin Sloan’s newest, Moonbound. The best book about sentient yeast that I’ve ever read, and I hope he writes ten more novels set in that world. (Also, any book from Robin Sloan, because he is a genius.) (Also his newsletter, because it is overflowing with great links and things of coolness.)
November 10, 2024 — 2:56 AM
Dylan Borowski says:
Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant.
They went out to discover mermaids, but the mermaids discovered them! If you love amazing world building and underwater horror, read this!
November 10, 2024 — 3:20 AM
Shondriette says:
An Unkindness of Ghosts by Rivers Solomon is absolutely gorgeous and gutting! It’s about a young healer, with a complicated past, living on a generation ship. The themes include: institutional racism, love (of every kind), overcoming trauma, and the many wonders of science. I’ve never read anything like it; it’s going to stay with me for a long time.
November 10, 2024 — 6:12 AM
John Mason says:
Ghost Station by. S. A. Barnes popped up on my radar early in the summer and kicked off a streak of reading pretty much only awesome horror for the season. This one is a creepy, gets under your skin, questioning what you think you know, kinda tale with compelling characters.
Couldn’t recommend it enough..gives me some Alien meets Event Horizon vibes.
November 10, 2024 — 6:14 AM
Deborah says:
The Heart in Winter by Kevin Barry. Did you love Deadwood? I’m drunk on the language.
November 10, 2024 — 6:41 AM