Echo

Thomas Olde Heuvelt, 1983-

Book - 2022

"After a terrible accident high in the Alps, travel journalist Nick Grevers wakes from a coma to find that his climbing buddy, Augustin, is missing and presumed dead. But Nick claims to not remember anything-even whatever horrible event that led to his maimed face and the plastic surgery that leaves him still in bandages and feeling like a B-movie monster. Sam, Nick's long-suffering boyfriend, wants to be glad that Nick is alive and coming home. But the accident has stirred up terrible memories-and it's beginning to seem that Sam isn't just being haunted by his own mistakes or Nick's own trauma. Because it turns out that-though Nick was the only body airlifted off that mysterious peak-he didn't come home alone,... after all. And now, their uninvited guest is awake"--

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Subjects
Genres
Thrillers (Fiction)
Magic realist fiction
Gay fiction
Novels
Published
New York, NY : Nightfire, a Tom Doherty Associates Book 2022.
Language
English
Dutch
Main Author
Thomas Olde Heuvelt, 1983- (author)
Other Authors
Moshe Gilula (translator)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
Originally published in Dutch as Echo in 2019 by Luitingh-Sijthoff in Amsterdam.
Physical Description
404 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9781250759566
9781250759559
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Heuvelt returns with an epic tale of madness that, while less focused than Hex (2016), is just as frightening. Nick and Sam are young men, blissfully in love, until Nick is horribly disfigured in a climbing accident. From the moment Nick is rescued, it is clear that he has brought something dark back with him, a force whose power is spilling out of his wrecked face and infecting others. Opening with a masterfully terrifying scene, the stage is set for a high-anxiety, cinematic tale, and Heuvelt delivers with an intimate and disorienting storytelling style, told by alternating Sam's notes with Nick's diary entries and a confession, parsed out in five sections. The plot may be a slow burn, but the horror is immersive and the fear paralyzing, as readers experience mortal danger, freezing cold, and debilitating vertigo along with the characters. Clearly reminiscent of classic Stephen King tomes, but also for fans of more-recent coming-of-age horror like The Bright Lands by John Fram (2020) or highly suspenseful stories with a strong sense of place like Road of Bones by Christopher Golden (2022).

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

Olde Heuvelt (Hex) loads this smart tale of a young man's dehumanization with extravagant horror tropes while expertly avoiding cliché. By the time Swiss rescuers reach stranded mountaineer Nick Grevers, his face has been horrifically mutilated and his climbing partner, Augustin, has gone missing. Sam Avery, Nick's lover, struggles to cope with the suggestion that whatever happened on the mountain was no accident, while Nick wonders whether he's becoming a monster as he tries to understand why he and Augustin felt compelled to climb the innocent-looking little peak of Le Maudit in the first place. As Nick's violent impulses slowly overtake him post-rescue, he worries that he may now embody Le Maudit's "old and dangerous" soul. Sam, meanwhile, investigates what happened to Nick and to others who have strayed too close to Le Maudit--including the 32 people who died violently at the hospital where Nick recuperates and all those who've committed suicide since. Olde Heuvelt expertly contrasts Nick's somber desperation and Sam's desperate optimism to create a moving narrative that stops just short of going over the top. Horror fans will be thrilled. (Feb.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Library Journal Review

First in the "Kithamar" trilogy, set in an ancient city with a blood-bathed history, Nebula-nominated, Hugo-winning Abraham's Age of Ash tells the story of a thief named Alys whose hunt for her brother's murderer reveals secrets that could bring down rulers (40,000-copy first printing). With Clean Air, award-winning author Blake introduces a postapocalyptic world where trees are so overgrown that pollen chokes the world and people must live in domes that someone is viciously slashing. From Hugo nominee and internationally best-selling Dutch author Heuvelt, sends Nick Grevers and climbing partner Augustin up a remote mountain in the Swiss Alps called the Maudit ("cursed" in French), whose eerie stillness presages the horror to come (150,000-copy first printing). In The Thousand Eyes, a follow-up to Larkwood's LJ-starred debut, The Unspoken Name, Csorwe has defied the wizard she served and disappeared into the unknown to lead a quiet life with her mage-girlfriend--but not for long; bits and pieces of an ancient goddess are arising in the worlds of the Echo Maze, and Csorwe must join with old companions to resist (150,000-copy first printing). Owen, The Boy with the Bird in His Chest in Lund's debut, is hidden away by his mother for years to protect him but decides to risk an outing in the woods that turns catastrophic (60,000-copy first printing). Successful YA author Ross's first adult fantasy, A River Enchanted takes place on an island as magical as Prospero's, where spirits responding only to a bard's music thrive--and the trouble they are stirring up forces just-returned musician Jack and his nemesis, heiress Adaira, to cooperate (50,000-copy first printing).

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