“You have no idea. You don’t know what you have. You have your youth and you’re beautiful, but you’re hungry, and that hunger blinds you to what you already have. All those raging hormones, making every decision for you. You’re always hurting, but you’ve never been hurt. Not really. Later on, though, you’ll realize youth is truly wasted on the young.”
Craig DiLouie’s Suffer the Children is a deeply disturbing blend of horror and apocalyptic fiction that goes far beyond your typical vampire tale. In this novel, DiLouie masterfully reimagines the classic trope of the undead, creating a chilling scenario where parents are forced to make unfathomable choices in the name of love.
The story begins with a global pandemic that strikes without warning, killing children en masse. Yet, in a horrifying twist, these children return from the dead, but with a deadly hunger for blood. The novel’s tension revolves around how far parents are willing to go to keep their children “alive”, knowing they must supply human blood to keep their children functional. But as the desperation grows, the cost, both moral and physical becomes unbearable.
The novels greatest strength lies in the exploration of parental love pushed to its extreme. The emotional weight of the parents decisions, choosing between watching their child die again or committing increasingly unspeakable acts, drives the narrative and forces readers to confront unsettling moral dilemmas. The characters are painfully human, each struggling with grief, denial, and the overwhelming desire to protect their children, no matter the cost.
The horror in Suffer the Children is not just in the supernatural elements but in the psychological toll it takes on the characters. It taps into primal fears of losing a child, of powerlessness in the face of death, and of the lengths one might go to for the ones they love.
The novel’s pacing is relentless, and the atmosphere is soaked in dread. While the characters constant struggle for survival keeps the plot moving forward, it’s the book’s deeper themes, about the fragility of life, the cost of survival, and the corrupting nature of desperation that linger long after the final page. Its exploration of grief and parental sacrifice is as emotionally heavy as it is terrifying.
Some readers might find the relentless darkness hard to bear, as there is little reprieve from the ever increasing tension and despair. I felt physically unwell and became quite depressed while reading this novel. To the point I had to put it down and take a break. While this obviously wasn’t pleasant, it’s exactly how I want a horror novel to make me feel. This, is how I judge a horror novel!
Suffer the Children is a huge standout in the horror genre, offering both visceral fear and a thoughtful examination of human nature under extreme pressure. It’s a novel that haunts you, not just with its horror, but with the emotional and ethical questions it raises. One of the best horror novels I’ve read in a long time!
My Highest Recommendation.