A scientific excursion into California woods turns into a twisty nightmare in this debut horror novel and prospective series launch.
CalTech geomorphologist and backpacker Dr. Siena Dupont takes a six-week trip into Deadswitch Wilderness, with a fellow scientist and two researchers, to view a rapidly melting glacier. The group immediately finds a dead body, which soon mysteriously vanishes. The expedition turns even more bizarre; research team members get lost and hallucinate, envisioning a mountain. Siena and the others realize their predicament involves an enigmatic place called The Briardark, and they might never return home. In a concurrent plot, Holden Sharpe, an IT guy at Oregon State University, discovers one of Siena’s audio recordings on an old OSU hard drive. It piques his interest, but his colleagues keep mum about Deadswitch, where five hikers went missing years before Siena’s group got lost there. Harian deftly couples odd, unexplained forest sights with horror tropes, from a cabin in the woods to shifting shadows. Despite a pileup of mysteries, the author grounds the narrative with crisp prose and well-crafted scenes even as the plot toggles between the research team and Holden at OSU. The cast is exceptional, and the novel’s illuminating latter half ultimately ties the labyrinthine forest with the parallel OSU plotline. While some readers will predict this turn, it doesn’t diminish pages of unwavering, spooky suspense. Moreover, Harian, with a sequel planned, drops surprises into the novel all the way until the end.
A new robust literary voice delivers an eerie, intense story.