“Disintegration” is in your face horror-graphic, gory, repulsive. Yet, like a highway collision, the reader just can’t look away, but must keep focusing on the story, racing through those pages to see what happens next, to whom, and how. “Disintegration” is gritty, not lyrical; cut-to-the-bone and then some, visceral. “Disintegration” deals with the kind of living nightmares we all pray never occur. It peeks in at the gory underbelly of horror, the death that lives just below the surface of our lives, the unexpected and un-forewarned events we cannot avoid. Yet, like a highway collision, the reader just can’t look away, but must keep focusing on the story, racing through those pages to see what happens next, to whom, and how. I guess I should not refer to it as “horror��; the author terms it a “mystery thriller”. Yet I found the events frightening enough to be considered horrifying, as is the imagery-graphic and gory. I will say this-“Disintegration” gave me the first nightmare I’d had in a while, and although it didn’t cleave to the book, there was plenty of horror in it to remind me of its source. The reader poises involuntarily on the cutting edge of the abyss with this novel-I recommend not listening it while you drive, or reading it at work, or while you’re cooking, because you’re not going to be able to break yourself away till the end.