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The House of Last Resort

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The next high concept horror novel from NYT bestselling author Christopher Golden.

Across Italy, there are many half-empty towns, nearly abandoned by those who migrate to the coast or to cities. The beautiful, crumbling hilltop town of Becchina is among them, but its mayor has taken drastic measures to rebuild—selling abandoned homes to anyone in the world for a single Euro, as long as the buyer promises to live there for at least five years. It’s a no-brainer for American couple Tommy and Kate Puglisi. Both work remotely, and Becchina is the home of Tommy’s grandparents, his closest living relatives.

It feels like a romantic adventure, an opportunity the young couple would be crazy not to seize. But from the moment they move in, they both feel a shadow has fallen on them. Tommy’s grandmother is furious, even a little frightened, when she realizes which house they’ve bought.

There are rooms in an annex at the back of the house that they didn’t know were there. The place makes strange noises at night, locked doors are suddenly open, and when they go to a family gathering, they’re certain people are whispering about them, and about their house, which one neighbor refers to as The House of Last Resort. Soon, they learn that the home was owned for generations by the Church, but the real secret, and the true dread, is unlocked when they finally learn what the priests were doing in this house for all those long years…and how many people died in the strange chapel inside.

While down in the catacombs beneath Becchina…something stirs.

314 pages, Paperback

First published January 30, 2024

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About the author

Christopher Golden

800 books2,974 followers
CHRISTOPHER GOLDEN is the New York Times bestselling, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of such novels as Road of Bones, Ararat, Snowblind, Of Saints and Shadows, and Red Hands. With Mike Mignola, he is the co-creator of the Outerverse comic book universe, including such series as Baltimore, Joe Golem: Occult Detective, and Lady Baltimore. As an editor, he has worked on the short story anthologies Seize the Night, Dark Cities, and The New Dead, among others, and he has also written and co-written comic books, video games, screenplays, and a network television pilot. Golden co-hosts the podcast Defenders Dialogue with horror author Brian Keene. In 2015 he founded the popular Merrimack Valley Halloween Book Festival. He was born and raised in Massachusetts, where he still lives with his family. His work has been nominated for the British Fantasy Award, the Eisner Award, and multiple Shirley Jackson Awards. For the Bram Stoker Awards, Golden has been nominated ten times in eight different categories. His original novels have been published in more than fifteen languages in countries around the world. Please visit him at www.christophergolden.com

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,366 reviews
Profile Image for megs_bookrack.
2,167 reviews14.1k followers
August 24, 2025
I'm just out here chilling on minority opinion island...



...trying to figure out how best to write my review of The House of Last Resort.

Even though this was the latest release from Christopher Golden, an author I have really enjoyed in the past, I was a little hesitant going into this one. While I hadn't read any reviews, that overall rating of 3.3 was glaring me in the face.

I was concerned. Did Golden have a flop?



I still haven't read a lot of the reviews, so I am not exactly sure what the issue is, but I have read this one and I really, really enjoyed it!

This went into a surprising Religious Horror direction, which I love. It felt Literary in it's build-up and I loved the culturally-rich setting. I feel like this would make an incredible movie. It was so vibrant.



In this novel, we're following American couple, Tommy and Kate Puglisi, who move to the small hilltop town of Becchina, in Italy.

Becchina is dwindling, with the population aging out and young people moving away. In an effort to revitalize the area, the mayor starts a program to sell abandoned homes to anyone for a single Euro, as long as the buyer promises to live there for at least five years.

Tommy and Kate jump at the chance. Tommy has family there and they're excited about the change in lifestyle and ability to get to spend more time with his family.



Upon arrival, the house isn't quite giving them the warm, romantic vibes they expected though. It's giving a more haunted, demonic feel than they would have signed up for.

And why do all the locals whisper about this place?



We follow Tommy and Kate as they attempt to settle in, make their new house a home and become involved with the local community.

Strange things are happening at the house though that they can't explain. They've discovered rooms they didn't know were there and the more they dig into the history of the house, the more nervous they become.



They ultimately learn that their home was owned by the church for generations and there are dark, dangerous secrets hiding behind every corner, and perhaps even under their feet. With a history like that, will this place ever be able to become a comfortable family home?

As mentioned above, I really enjoyed this. I have always vibed with Golden's writing. It's engaging.

Granted, not every moment is smash-bang in your face, it has a lot of quiet, more subtle moments, but all the more for the build, I say. I love a slow burn, as long as the payoff is worth it and IMO, this one is.



Once I started this book, I was definitely consumed by the story. I read 43% in my first sitting. I barely came up for air. I ended up finishing it in a day.

I loved the atmosphere and the feeling of the historic town and property. I was intrigued by the mystery of the house and as a lover of Religious Horror, I was happy to see it take a turn in that direction. The whole feeling of that place was beautifully depicted by Golden.



I would recommend this to Horror fans, or people who enjoy a slow burn set amongst a creepy, mysterious atmosphere. Also, haunted house fans, this is a unique take in the subgenre, so you should definitely check it out.

Thank you so much to the publisher, St. Martin's Press, for providing me a copy to read and review. I always look forward to picking up Golden's latest work.

This one was definitely a win for me!
Profile Image for LIsa Noell "Rocking the chutzpah!".
736 reviews576 followers
January 17, 2024
My thanks to St. Martin's Press, Christopher Golden and Netgalley.
Well, honestly I've never been at a loss to describe a Golden book. Yet, here I am.
I can't fault Christopher too much. Truth is that the thought of demons seems a bit ridiculous. I've never been a fan of this trope, and the few times I was? Well, that was because they scared the ever loving shit outta me! This? This was not Lisa Noell having any type of shit scared outta her. This was mostly just me being annoyed as all hell that I was spending this much time reading a book that I hated, written by a man whose books I've always loved! So, there ya' have it.
Love the author. Hated the story!
Still, me hating is still a worthy read. 2 1/2 stars, rounded up.
Update:Yeah, the more I think about this tale, the more I actively hate it. So, this is me giving it a demotion! 2 stars.
Profile Image for Will Byrnes.
1,373 reviews121k followers
April 10, 2025
A forty-minute drive from the volcanic Mount Etna, Becchina should have been alive.
Instead, it was the corpse of a town that didn’t even realize it was already dead.
--------------------------------------
A low scritching noise caught his attention, and he swung the flashlight beam down to the right, where the natural tunnel and the man-made wall formed a dark and jagged corner. Tiny, putrid-yellow eyes glittered in the shadows.
“Jesus Christ!” Tommy hissed, jerking backward in revulsion as the flashlight beam illuminated the foot-long rat crouched in that corner.
Silent, twitching, the rat stared brazenly up at him, unafraid. It watched him with apparent disdain, as if to let Tommy know that he was the intruder here, not the rat.
A deal that is too good to believe. Ownership of an abandoned hilltop house in a Sicilian town (Becchina, a made-up town, - buh-kee-na) for a single euro, as long as you agree to live there for five years and invest 50K euros fixing it up. What could possibly go wrong? Tommy and Kate Puglisi see this as a once-in-a-lifetime opportunity. A chance for a much better future than they could ever afford in Boston.

description
Christopher Golden - Image from MichelleRLane.com
The world seemed to be unraveling every day. American culture seemed to be rotting from the inside out, manipulated by an amoral oligarchy whose worst enemy was young people who didn’t want to play their game, and Kate and Tommy were happy to be counted in that category. The irony had not been lost on them, that the nineteenth and twentieth centuries had been defined by people leaving the so-called Old World to seek their fortunes in the New World, and now she and Tommy were doing the opposite, seeking new life in the Old World. But they both believed that earlier generations had it right—a slower life, a smaller circle, a focus on home.
That Tommy's family had come from Becchina gave it an additional draw, a chance to spend time with his grandparents, whom he loved and very much wanted to see lot of in their final years. The importance of that is magnified by the fact that both of Tommy’s parents are dead. Tommy and Kate are on extended time off from work, so can attend to getting things fixed up before returning to their jobs, remote jobs, which allows them the freedom to live anywhere. And they do not yet have children.

Of course the house comes with some unadvertised extras. The book opens with:
The rats are like fingers.
No. That’s not right. Fingers can reach out, can grasp and extend. The rats are not like fingers at all. They are periscopes, like those on submarines, each able to give its captain only a limited view of the world above. From their place below, among the dead, the lost ones can see only as far as the rats can see. But they are patient, and so they wait. And they let the rats run.
Uh oh. Squatters. Toss in being within commuting distance of Mount Etna to shake things up. Oh, and that lady down the hill who is always staring daggers at them whenever they pass by. And the family, who is warm and welcoming but not altogether forthright about the history of the town or the house. On the other hand, there is a group of other new arrivals, lured by the same opportunity. They call themselves The Imports. It’s fun seeing Tommy reconnect with famiglia. He and Kate slowly get to know the town and some of its residents, make friends, and come up with a plan to boost the local economy. Can-do Yanks in action.

But things keep happening. Kate thinks she sees someone in the house, but did she really? A tremor arrives soon after they do. There is a part of the house that the R/E agent somehow managed to overlook when showing the place. A door that was locked, but then is mysteriously open. Golden makes generous use of Gothic fiction features (see abbreviated list in EXTRA STUFF) to give you chills.

Tommy and Kate are actually a happy couple. Many horror books use spectral events as manifestations of underlying relationship problems. Not the case here. This is also not a case in which better-off sorts gentrify an old area, forcing out the locals. Instead, they are trying to save, replenish, and reconstruct, infusing new life into a withered, crumbling, forgotten town. The houses The Imports bought were already abandoned. The newbies are looking to build up not just the houses they occupy but the community as well. So, the dark forces here are not cutouts for obvious social criticism. They are pretty much straight up malignancy coming at you in sundry ways. One way is our visceral reaction to vermin.

The rats that feature in the opening lines persist throughout, gaining in their power to induce fear and loathing. It was a specific choice. In the Book Nook interview, Golden talks about how he believes we mortals have a race-memory fear of rats, the result of plagues that wiped large portions of humanity from the planet multiple times, akin to the natural fear most of us have of snakes, from the days when they were in our immediate environment and posed a mortal threat. Rats give us the creeps.

What you get in The House of Last Resort is a likable pair in peril, with a plentiful supply of scary, a cauldron of creepy, and a shipload of shivers. If you think your basement is a mess, you have no idea. There are nifty twists, some local color and action aplenty to keep you turning the pages. Depending on your susceptibility to such books, you may get a sleepless night or two out of this one. A fun read, a pure entertainment, uncluttered by larger sociopolitical concerns, a fabulous summer read. But probably a bad idea to take this along if you plan to visit Sicily.
A voice crying out. Tommy frowned, wondering if that had been a dream or if it had been what woke him.
The wind gusted, rattling the window in its frame. He listened to see if the cry would come again but heard nothing beyond the sighs and creaks of the old house.

Review posted - 04/05/24

Publication dates
----------Hardcover – 01/30/2024
----------Trade Paperback - 4/1/025


I received an ARE of The House of Last Resort from St. Martin’s Press in return for a fair review, and some DNA samples. Thanks, folks, and thanks to NetGalley for facilitating.




This review will soon be cross-posted on my site, Coot’s Reviews. Stop by and say Hi!

=============================EXTRA STUFF

Links to Golden’s personal, FB, Instagram, and Twitter pages

Profile
Golden is a monster of an author who got started, and found success, very early. He has a gazillion publications to his credit and an army-size host of teleplay credits from his years writing for Buffy with Joss Whedon, and plenty more. And then there are the comics. You may have heard of Hell Boy, among those. Here is a list of what he has published, from Fiction DB. I personally think he has elves, or more likely, goblins, chained to computers in his basement helping him crank out such volume.

My reviews of Golden’s two prior books
----------2022 - Road of Bones
----------2023 - All Hallows

Interviews
-----Paul Semel - Exclusive Interview: “The House Of Last Resort” Author Christopher Golden
----- WYSO - Book Nook - ’The House of Last Resort,’ by Christopher Golden by Vick Mickunas – audio – 50:04

Checklist – Partial Characteristics of the Gothic Novel
See my review of While You Sleep for more of this sort
Setting - castle or old mansion - oh, Yeah
Secret passages or creaky doors - of course
Atmosphere of mystery or suspense - fuh shoo-uh
Ancient prophecy or legend - sort of
Omens, portents, visions - tremors, hints from neighbors and family
Supernatural or otherwise inexplicable events - ghost sightings?
High, overwrought emotion - you betcha
Women in distress - actually not so much. Both Tommy and Kate are beset
Women threatened by powerful, tyrannical male - see above
Profile Image for Char.
1,954 reviews1,879 followers
May 4, 2024
If someone offered you an old, dignified home and all its furnishings for one Euro, would you move overseas to take it? That's what Tommy and Kate did. Will it prove to be a good move? You'll have to read this to find out!

This book had me trying to imagine what it would be like to move to a foreign country and immersing yourself in that country's day to day living. For Tommy and Kate, this means being closer to what little family Tommy has, and it also means being surrounded by all kinds of religious artifacts and having to participate regularly in church. But most of all, it means accepting the history of their new house, and it's not a good one. This is a horror novel, after all.

There are scary old rooms in the new house-one of which looked almost like a church and another where the door seems to lock or unlock at will. I wonder what those rooms were used for originally? Tommy and Kate even discovered some local catacombs and want to open them to tourists. When they discover that the locals refer to the house as "The House of Last Resort" they start to worry and rightfully so. This is a horror novel, after all.

I'm finding it difficult to talk about this book without spoiling anything, so I won't say anything more about the plot. This was a slow burn at first but then, the tension slowly starts to build before some of the mysteries are revealed and the real fun starts.

There are some things I would have liked to know about the house and its history-a deeper dive, so to speak, but I never did get that. I'm not sure if I would have liked that more than the veil of mystery that I did get? I guess I'll never know! The entire concept of a house like this fascinates me.

Overall, I enjoyed this book, especially the denouement. Oftentimes, haunted house tales fall short when it comes to WHY the house is haunted. This is usually where most haunted house stories fall apart, as far as I'm concerned, but not with this one. I loved the idea and would have loved to know even more about the house's history, but as it stands? This is still a great story and I recommend it!

Available everywhere on January 30th!

*Thank you to Christopher Golden for the ARC in exchange for my honest feedback. This is it!*
Profile Image for Ghoul Von Horror.
1,106 reviews439 followers
January 21, 2024
[TW: Language, death of parent, dementia, gaslighting, toxic parent relationships, use of c-word, death of family, gory scenes, blood]

*****SPOILERS*****
About the book:
Across Italy, there are many half-empty towns, nearly abandoned by those who migrate to the coast or to cities. The beautiful, crumbling hilltop town of Becchina is among them, but its mayor has taken drastic measures to rebuild—selling abandoned homes to anyone in the world for a single Euro, as long as the buyer promises to live there for at least five years. It’s a no-brainer for American couple Tommy and Kate Puglisi. Both work remotely, and Becchina is the home of Tommy’s grandparents, his closest living relatives.

It feels like a romantic adventure, an opportunity the young couple would be crazy not to seize. But from the moment they move in, they both feel a shadow has fallen on them. Tommy’s grandmother is furious, even a little frightened, when she realizes which house they’ve bought.

There are rooms in an annex at the back of the house that they didn’t know were there. The place makes strange noises at night, locked doors are suddenly open, and when they go to a family gathering, they’re certain people are whispering about them, and about their house, which one neighbor refers to as The House of Last Resort. Soon, they learn that the home was owned for generations by the Church, but the real secret, and the true dread, is unlocked when they finally learn what the priests were doing in this house for all those long years…and how many people died in the strange chapel inside.
Release Date: January 30th, 2024
Genre: Horror
Pages: 304
Rating:

What I Liked:
1. Love a good house on the hill cover
2. Some creepy scenes

What I Didn't Like:
1. Dialog between characters is so cheesy
2. Don't like Tommy and Kate
3. Plot holes
4. Boring
5. Certain parts they would just ramble about the same stuff that didn't matter

Overall Thoughts:
{{Disclaimer: I write my review as I read}}

--------BOOK ONE: SEPTEMBER ABOVE--------

The book starts off oddly criticizing people for not being able to just move to another country. It was weird. People don't move for lots of reasons; family, jobs, etc...

This whole time though I kept wondering what do these two do for money because I'm 30 pages in and it still hasn't been mentioned.

Confused with why the author threw in that Kate has body dysmorphia. It seemed so out of place.

I hate how the author kept saying it was a generational thing that didn't want to stay in one place and work. That is not even true. Why say that it's a whole group of people born within like 12 years that feel that way. I know tons of people that like and enjoy setting down roots in one location. Why not just have the characters say that it was how they felt rather than a whole group on hundreds of thousands of people. It just kept annoying me. Almost like the couple were so judgy of other people who can't experience what they are doing.

Tommy tells Nonna she can speak Italian when they come to her house, but earlier in the morning when she came to his house he was yelling at her to speak English. Which one is it dude?

They hear a door slam shut but she decides to just put on her tank top and doesn't put pants on, even forgoing her thong (rolls eyes) and then Winnie Poohs it around the house when they are worried someone is in the house. Why?? What??

Oh and Tommy saying he's going to check out the sound and the fuse box, but doesn't bring a flashlight. How was he going to see anything? Tommy then proceeds to make fun of Kate for having her phones flashlight but that's not ridiculous.

So Kate is a piece of shit. She has body dysmorphia, is jealous of Franca, and all the while Tommy is amazing and has zero negative things about himself.

Kate and Tommy remind me of those people that started to diet and they have to tell everyone about how much better they are. I found it completely annoying how they kept pushing moving to Sicily on their friends.


Why is generation used to much in this book?

Katie sleeps in a thong - 3 times mentioned. You know because thongs are so comfortable to sleep in.


Okay so now they want to take over the whole tourist catacombs thing and not get paid for it. Quit their jobs (still what are their jobs?) They all just assume that this town that is struggling has the money to fix the catacombs enough to make them safe.

Kate has to the most agreeable person. They don't have arguments. He mentions doing something and she says of course.

The introduction of sleepwalking in a book is so weird. I just read about this in which the character started sleepwalking in a new house.


{RANT} I am sorry but I absolutely hate Tommy and Kate. They go about complaining about how their friends were never going to move to Italy and they knew it all along because they didn't have the guts. Honestly what is the selling point to this town? Because it's a ghost town that's dying off and the mayor is selling off the houses for super cheap. But what is the privilege that they think their friends can just quit their jobs and move their families to this dying town to live. I just don't get where these characters minds are. They sound so entitled it's sickening. I was absolutely annoyed with them and if they were my friends with their high and mighty attitude I'd kick them to the curb. Just because they have the privilege and the "jobs" to move to another country doesn't mean that everybody else has that privilege. Not only that but it's not like he moved to some town where he didn't even know anyone, his family lives there. So it's not like he's starting fresh like he didn't know anybody there he already has a leg up because he's been there, and his grandparents live there. He's asking people to move there who don't know anyone there and have never been there. {END RANT} Sorry I know it's just a book but these characters I've run into people that think like this.


I didn't understand the point of the grandmother being upset with them moving into The House of Last Resort, but then getting mad when Marcello tried to explain to them the history. Why was she so upset that she made it clear that she was but then not want them to know why it was a bad place?

Why Kate is even having a reaction to finding out that exorcism were performed in the house. She starts off the book saying she doesn't even believe in ghosts or anything Supernatural so why is she so bothered by learning this information.

After learning about the house they then decide that they're going to have it become a tourist spot with the catacombs, but that makes little sense since they tore out everything that made the house the exorcism spot so they would have to make it look that way again I guess.


Super happy that Kate stood up Tommy and told him exactly what happened.


--------BOOK TWO: OCTOBER BELOW--------
So we just jump right into them doing the work on the catacombs. Belinda (Kate's friend) calls and their conversation bothered me. Not once does Kate ask her anything and it's just Belinda asking Kate question after question. I know we have to move the plot forward but books that have surface level friendship feel so pointless and boring. While I applaud the author for having a Black character why make it a trivial friend we'll most likely never hear from again? She then tells Belinda that there are Black people in her town and if she moved there she wouldn't have to have the same issues she faces in America. How removed is Kate that she thinks that a Black person moving to a small old fashion town in Europe would be less racist. Kate reminds me of the person that says they can't be racist because they have Black friends.


We spend way too many pages going over and over Tommy's grandfather dying. They just keep talking about when he is going to die, back to Kate not wanting to see him, and then he does and we talk about it some more.


Nothing happens. The scary parts (two close togetherl) happened around 100 pages. So you're just stuck reading about things that don't even matter.

The grandma saw a rat come out of her husband and now she thinks he is possessed. So they are going to bury him in the catacombs. We get this whole backstory on how when he was 12 he was one of the people who was possessed and they brought him to the house to try to get him an exorcism. And like this whole scenario isn't weird enough they have to bury his grandpa in their house under the floorboards. Which this whole scene was really confusing when they were describing why this had to happen. I'm not sure why he has to be buried there. He can't just be buried in the catacombs. They said the people in the catacombs are even people that were possessed. Can the people that were exorcised not be buried with people that are exorcised? Why not put the grandfather in a box that traps the demon it can't get out to attack Tommy?


When the comtracter redid the annex how did she not notice there were stairs there?

I guess his knee and ribs aren't hurting that badly. He's just able to get up and walk down all these stairs with the dumbest reasoning ever. His theory is that if he goes up the stairs he more likely to be crushed in another tremor than if he goes underground. That makes zero sense.

So Franca is working with the demon and the demon, Alberith. Alberith can only jump from bloodline to bloodline. Seems like a dumb way to continue as a demon because what if that person can't have kids or never does then you just go back to hell and have to wait on a new body. I wonder if you're in hell you would know who to take next. Also what is wrong with a fresh start anyways?

Franca explains the whole thing to him and he asks if she will let Kate go to which she replies "probably." Um no. I don't understand why they don't even try to fight back. There are two of them and yes she has a knife but getting a knife out of a persons hand isn't that difficult. He has zero guarantee that she will really let Kate go because honestly why would she? So he is like okay I'll trust this random lady that lied to us to get me here and hope this time she isn't lying.


Of course in Kate fashion she has Patrick help her but only after getting Tommy out of the tombs does she even tell Patrick that his husband is injured. She even tells him he'll be fine but that's far from the truth, because she said that Rohaan was messed up and hit his head badly when they first crashed. Patrick then chooses to stay and help her and Tommy rather than tend to his own husband who is injured. No. No. No one would do that!


Have I mentioned how much I hate Kate? She gets mad at Don Pino because he didn't keep them away from buying the house or warning them. They didn't care. They heard about the house shortly (two weeks after moving in) but they didn't care and just wanted it to be a tourist spot. She the gets mad again at the priest when he tells her he's not an exorcism priests and he doesn't know the prayer needed. Oh and suddenly now the priest knows the prayer. Okay?

No happy ending for Tommy and Kate. I am not bothered by this. They are horrible.


Final Thoughts:
I suppose when I read about what this book was I assumed that it was a book that dealt with a house that had a history that no one wanted to even come into the house, but that's not what this was. The grandmother puts up a fuss in the beginning and then they work on the house like it's nothing.

I was so bored. Nothing happens in this book and it's all just talking and talking. There are a few "jump scares" but for the most part it's just people talking about the house and things that could happen. You actually hear more about things that have happened then read about them happening in the now of the book. I struggled to finish this book. I almost dnfed so many times but then I got 215 pages into the book before I just skimmed the ending.


I left this book with lots of questions. If Franca knew the demon wanted Tommy why wouldn't they have just worked for her to kill the grandfather faster so he could get to Tommy? Why just keep waiting as his body fell apart? Why not just take his body when Tommy was young and visiting? Who opened the door to the Annex? Did Franca open the door? Why couldn't the rats get out once the door was opened? Couldn't the rats just chew through the side of the house - they're rats and rats can chew through a lot of stuff.


This book is perfect if you don't like reading about anything happening but enjoy knowing things happened. Unfortunately for me I like being shown not told about it. The ending finally gives you some stuff that happens, but it takes so long to get to a point where anything happens.

Things that went no where;
-Kate's body dysmorphia (it's never mentioned again)
-Kate's sleepwalking


IG | Blog


Thanks to Netgalley and St. Martin's Press for this digital arc copy of the book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Jamie.
477 reviews785 followers
September 20, 2023
I low-key swore off Christopher Golden's books after having read Soulless and Road of Bones (they both had fantastic premises but ultimately fell a bit flat for me), but The House of Last Resort sounded right up my alley (a haunted house and Italy and Catholic Church shenanigans – yes, please!) and so I had to give his writing one more shot. And, well, I'm happy to report that this book was pretty dang good. I mean, I'm still slightly traumatized by the ending, but that seems pretty par for the course as far as Golden's books are concerned.

So, yeah, the setting. Amazeballs. I loved the descriptions of Sicily and I may or may not have spent last night Googling “one euro houses in Italy” and “is it hard for Americans to get permanent residency in Italy?” I mean, I'm definitely rethinking that idea now that I've read the book in its entirety (and also because it sounds complicated AF to move to Italy long-term as a non-European – any Italians out there interested in a sham marriage?*), but the setting is really fabulous.

I do have to say, however, that I was tremendously annoyed by the main characters, Tommy and Kate, and their “American savior” complexes. Who moves to a new location and immediately thinks “I know better how to fix this place than the people whose families have been here for generations!” At least get your boxes unpacked before you start making plans for restoring the ancient catacombs, sheesh.

This book is a rather slow burn up until the last 30% or so, but there were still parts that were properly creepy. That scene with Kate and Nonno when they're alone together? Heck, yes, that's exactly what I came here looking for!

And the ending? Well, thanks Mr. Golden, I'll be sending you my therapy bill. At least I mostly saw it coming and had time to prepare myself.

Final rating: 3.85 stars, rounded up. If you like haunted house stories set in exotic locations, The House of Last Resort is worth a read.

Many thanks to NetGalley and St. Martin's Press for providing me with an advance copy of this book to review.

*I'm just joking, really. Please don't send me creepy PMs.
Profile Image for Sujoya - theoverbookedbibliophile.
789 reviews3,549 followers
February 13, 2024
3.5⭐️

Tommaso “Tommy” Puglisi and his wife Kate respond to an advertisement for One-Euro real estate in the fictional town of Becchina in Sicily. Happy to leave the stressful life in the USA behind for what they hope would be a quiet and slower-paced lifestyle among Tommy’s family on his late father’s side, they invest in an old decrepit mansion they hope to restore. Unbeknownst to them, their new home has a history and was known to the locals as “La casa dell’ultima risorsa” or “the house of the last resort.” Soon after moving in, Kate and Tommy begin to sense something not quite right in the house and their friends and family would rather keep their knowledge of the house’s history to themselves. But after they discover a hidden chapel behind a corridor, the frequency of eerie occurrences in their home begins to increase. As the narrative progresses we follow the young couple as they begin to uncover the secrets buried underneath their new home and it is only a matter of time before they are fighting for their lives against evil forces that have been laying dormant, closer to home that they had ever imagined.

The House of the Last Resort by Christopher Golden is an intriguing, atmospheric read. To be honest, this is not a genre that I dabble in, but the premise sparked my interest. I loved the setting – the decrepit houses and the catacombs, the old village, the descriptions of the food, community and the locale complete with its frequent tremors. The backstory of the house was certainly interesting. However, I thought the pacing of the narrative was a tad too slow and found character development lacking in depth. The author briefly touches upon the mindset of fellow “Imports” like Kate and Tommy and though we get to meet several characters who have recently made Becchina their home, we do not get to explore their motivations beyond a point. Neither Tommy nor Kate are particularly interesting characters and though Tommy’s family history plays a key role in the story, even that aspect is not discussed in detail and I had expected more after the long-drawn but suspenseful buildup. The supernatural/horror elements were quite tame given the genre, but I’m not complaining. Overall, though I really liked the premise, I wasn’t completely satisfied with the execution. However, other readers have enjoyed this novel more than I did.

Many thanks to St. Martin’s Press for the digital review copy via NetGalley. All opinions expressed in this review are my own. The House of the Last Resort was published on January 30, 2024.

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Profile Image for Luvtoread (Trying to catch up).
582 reviews455 followers
March 27, 2025
Tommy and Kate Puglisi make a life changing decision to move to Becchina, a small village in Sicily when they learn certain houses are being offered for one-euro in hope to repopulate the almost ghost towns and help them thrive again. Tommy's loving, paternal grandparents live over there and they are all he has left of his family and Kate and he want to make something special of their lives so they up and move without knowing much of the language or how superstition plays a huge part in many old Sicilian's history so the couple may not be accepted as easily as they originally thought.

The house needs work but is otherwise breathtaking and huge! Over fifteen glorious rooms to renovate. Kate is over the moon although Tommy feels a bit of trepidation yet doesn't understand why. Neither Kate or Tommy are religious although respectful to others but are shocked when they learn that a priest had lived in their house for over forty years. Soon they find out the horrible history of their new home and are devastated by the news which doesn't help their mental states when doors slam, whispers or shadows moving in the corners and rats appearing and disappearing as if they want Tommy's attention. Kate sleep walks and talks about a priest in her sleep. As the couple struggles to keep their new lives together, unknown to both of them a real nightmare has been waiting for them and people will die unless Tommy and Kate find the light to lead them out of the darkness that has wanted and waited for Tommy for many, many years.


This was an interesting, dark and entertaining story based around the power and. strength of love, faith, superstitions and certain beliefs and rituals of the Roman Catholic church. The book was a nice, slow-burn built around the strong and everlasting love of a naive young couple who have their whole lives ahead of them and are at the peak of their happiness which is tested when they encounter happenings that occur only in horror books and nightmares and they try to handle the events themselves.

The characters were very intriguing and entertaining especially with the language barrier and different customs. Christopher Golden really captured the atmosphere and essence of this small fictional town in Sicily. The writing describing the cultural architecture of the old homes and the very creepy catacombs was so darn good and I could visualize the village and it's culture so vividly that I felt as if I was an invisible observer keeping step to step with Tommy and Kate from page one until the very end of the book.


The last thirty percent of this book was worth waiting for when it becomes super dark, creepy and very frightening. The book was so sweet and calm for so long that I never expected the story to become so scary that I couldn't read it anymore in the middle of the night!

I enjoyed all of 'Christopher Golden's' books that I've read so far, some more than others so I definitely recommend this novel. Hopefully in the future, books similar in nature to the outstanding "Road Of Bones" will be written again or have a sequel? I just found that book to be an unforgettable horror novel in every way!


I want to thank the publisher "St. Martin's Press" and Netgalley for the opportunity to read this digital copy ad any thoughts or opinions expressed are unbiased and mine alone!

I have given a rating of 4 EERIE AND NIGHTMARISH 🌟🌟🌟🌟 STARS!!
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,897 reviews4,845 followers
March 20, 2024
2.5 Stars
I am known to be tough on haunted house books and once again I find these kinds of stories to feel tired and repetitive.

The Italian setting appealed to me in concept but in execution this story didn't provide me with a sense of the place. I wanted to feel transported through this narrative, but it left me cold. The story isn't very long, but I found it a slow, unsatisfying ride. I wish I enjoyed it more.

Disclaimer I received a copy of this book from the publisher.
Profile Image for Court Zierk.
370 reviews351 followers
October 4, 2025
⭐️ ⭐️

I think I’ve reached peak de-sensitization when it comes to haunted house stories. It takes a doozy to impress me, and this lacked the dooziness to penetrate my desensitized veneer.

This was run-of-the-mill horror at best, with very little to offer the genre in terms of originality. It leaned on tropes to do the heavy lifting, and actively steered away from the unpredictable. I found myself looking at the progress indicator on my Kindle on almost every page, hoping it would show me a higher number than it ever did.

I’m all for flawed protagonists, but these main characters had no redeeming qualities. None whatsoever. Their journey somehow shifted from escaping the capitalist rat-race (pun intended) and creating a simpler, more relaxed and unburdened life to exploiting their historical home for a tourism-based come up. It’s an audacious American posture, which now that I’m reading what I wrote, might be the most resonant thing in this book.

A long, drawn out, laborious slog for me. I’m glad that one’s behind me.
Profile Image for Devi.
216 reviews46 followers
February 28, 2024
Ugh.. This was so meh.. Started off good with good characters, but then went downhill real fast😑
Profile Image for Constantine.
1,093 reviews370 followers
November 15, 2023
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐
Genre: Horror

The House of Last Resort follows the story of an American couple named Tommy and Kate Puglisi who purchase a dilapidated property in the Italian town of Becchina for the price of one euro. In an effort to breathe new life into the waning village, the municipality is making this bargain available to anyone who is prepared to settle there permanently for a period of at least five years and invest in repairs.

Tommy and Kate are thrilled to embark on this new journey together, but they are shocked to learn that the house they bought has a sinister past. It was previously owned by the Church, and there are persistent allegations that exorcisms and other occult rites were performed there in its heyday. Tommy and Kate begin to sense a malicious presence in the house at the same time as they begin to hear strange noises and experience occurrences that cannot be explained.

I won't go into more detail about the plot since I believe that readers get the most out of these kinds of stories when they find them on their own. The setting of the book in Sicily was one of my favorite aspects of it, and I believe the author did an excellent job bringing the setting to life through his vivid descriptions

Despite the fact that the story itself is intriguing, I was unable to connect with it as much as I hoped for. Having previously read and thoroughly loved the author's prior work, "Road of Bones," I am able to say that the atmosphere in this particular tale was lacking for me. I have the impression that quite a bit of improvement might be made to the atmosphere, and I believe the author is capable of doing so because the book that he had written before was really atmospheric.

Another problem of this story is that it takes quite some time to get going once it finally does. I prefer terrifying tales that go quickly over those that build suspense over time. All of these characteristics, however, are subjective and depend on the individual taste of the reader. If you find the synopsis interesting, you should give it a shot because there's a chance you'll enjoy it.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC.
1 review
February 5, 2024
Forget the plot for a moment.
The writing is pedestrian. The dialogues are artificial and painful to read, like the author is uncomfortable with dialogues between a young couple. The characters Tommy and Kate are flat. I don't know this author, but if this is what gets picked up by an agent such as Morhaim, gets published as a hard cover and becomes a best-seller, I despair. Of course, 'genre' writing does not have to be literary, but this book sounds like it has been written by a fifteen year-old. Check this out:
"I still have no idea how the movers' truck is going to get to the house."
"Magic?" Tommy said. "Maybe they use a hot air balloon."
She poked him in the side.
"Hey! Don't poke the driver!"
'Hot air balloon, my butt!"
Tommy snikered.

Painful, and we're only at page 6...
And the pain continues for many, many pages...
Just a couple of examples before my head explodes with anger and frustration.
P.51: "A frown creased her forehead." Ouch. What happened to "She frowned"?? Can a frown crease anything else? An armpit perhaps? A big toe? Sloppy writing from an author who wants to "stuff" the book and sound "writy" (i.e. look at how pretty I can write!). Come on, man.
Two "deeper darkness" 4 short paragraphs apart (pp. 55-56).
This book sure feels like a first draft written in a hurry.
By the way, author, at page 31, the Italian word for the word banana is "banana" Do your research.
Enough.
Impossible not to feel great anger that this thing got picked up, published, and attracted a glowing review in the New York Times...
Profile Image for Anna.
101 reviews
February 7, 2024
DNF at 20%. So boring, so poorly written. “Show, don’t tell” should’ve been implemented from page 1. Main characters very annoying and unrealistic. Way too much “they shared a kiss” blah blah blah, like just unpack your house already
Profile Image for Rachel Hunter.
80 reviews18 followers
May 30, 2024
This has been my least favorite book of this authors. And it is 100% due to the whole demons and
storyline that smacked me in the face for the last quarter of the book. I was enjoying this so much. I liked the characters, loved the town and the storyline of all of these people moving here to fix it up. I was having a great time reading about that. But there just had to be exorcisms. I have just never and will never enjoy reading books or watching movies about that kind of stuff. It's been done and done and done. I was really hoping this book was going in another direction, but was so disappointed once the demon came out to play. And that bit of the story felt so rushed. Maybe if there had been a few more chapters going into more detail. I still wouldn't have liked it but maybe it could've had a more solid ending. I don't know, I am a fan of this author and will continue to read his work, but this one just wasn't for me. I received an advance review copy for free, and I am leaving this review voluntarily.
Profile Image for Kimberly R.
355 reviews8 followers
December 17, 2023
Tommy and Kate move to Italy from the US. They get a great deal on The House of Last Resort. Unbeknownst to them the church used to do major exorcisms there. Creepy stuff starts happening and they begin to worry.
This was an exciting read that had me on the edge of my seat. Thanks NetGalley and St. Martins Press for this ARC that will be released January 30, 2024!
Profile Image for Katie T.
1,320 reviews263 followers
May 23, 2024
An obnoxious couple thinks they can move to Sicily with all their best buddies, with zero Italian fluency, and revive a dead town. Basically colonize the shit out of an unsuspecting small town. You deserve your demonic possession.
Profile Image for Gyalten Lekden.
621 reviews153 followers
December 7, 2025
A haunted house story with a twist, Golden’s novel explores the meeting of relocation (both emotional and geographical) with fractured identities, and how relationships navigate such tectonic convergences. The house is this gothic protuberance in a small Sicilian town, our main characters new US ex-pats with family ties to the town, and though they have moved here to leave the rat race of busy everyday life behind they are intent on building up tourism to help the town thrive; the novel is full of these seeming contradictions, and it works really well to create a sense of narrative tension and atmosphere. In general, the world-building and character development both feel natural and inviting, creating a sense of place that is recognizable and a pair of main characters that are motivated, dedicated, and multi-dimensional enough to stay interesting. The plotting is largely effective, setting up a rosy picture that is cut through with occasional eruptions of darkness, unsettling moments that indicate not all is what it seems, and these disturbances increase in frequency until the final act of the book is all disturbance and the pretense of idyllic comfort is relegated to memory. That is pretty standard for books playing in this genre, ostensibly a haunted house book but one that twists and confuses some genre (and reader) expectations in the final act, or at least merges genre ideas to combine with various common horror mainstays in a playful way. While rather expected, the plotting is effective and keeps the reader engaged in the story and these characters. It never feels like it is spinning its wheels or just setting up the next scare. I do have to say that some of the writing felt a little overwrought, especially when it came to the characters. The dialogue, both inner and out dialogue, had a forced feeling, one that didn’t seem to be the narrative intent. The dialogue felt like it over-explained things and broke away from the naturalism of the rest of the world and the writing. It wasn’t enough to sour me on the book, but it did prevent me from rating the book higher, because it reminded me constantly that this was a fabrication. Other than the inner/outer dialogue I thought the writing was good, it was descriptive and moved between characters in a graceful way that allowed for an expansive view of the world of the story and kept me hooked into the narrative.

There wasn’t anything wildly inventive about this story; take a young and idealistic couple and put them in a new environment where they stand out but don’t want to, and then have creepy things start happening to them, testing their resolve and relationship along the way. However, it succeeds in every element of its storytelling, and is entertaining throughout. As is somewhat normal with haunted house stories, which is one of the modalities this story is working within, there is always the question of the people being more haunted than the house, or, at least, the haunting is reflecting something about the characters (both to themselves and the readers). Here we get to examine a mostly healthy relationship under the intense strain of uprooting your entire lives for a dream and not knowing if it will work out. That combines with ideas of return, be it prodigal grandson or not, and how facing your (cultural/familial/psychological) inheritance can be traumatic and world changing. There is something desperate about the wild life changes our characters are making and it is an engaging way to think about identity and performance, as well as ideas of ownership, appropriation, and authenticity. This story is never heavy-handed but readily plays with all these ideas and more to keep the reader engaged while still on the edge of their seat.

(Rounded from 3.5)
Profile Image for Samantha.
147 reviews51 followers
January 30, 2024
Happy publication day!

3.5 stars rounded down for this one. This was definitely not what I expected! Maybe that’s a good thing? I’m not sure.

Kate and Tommy must have some kind of high-profile remote careers, because they decide to move to Sicily on whim. Sure the houses are marketed at 1 euro a piece to encourage growth and the restoring of prosperity to a town on the brink of disappearing from the map, but still. That’s wild. Once they move into this big 15 room house, they realize something creepy is going on when they discover a locked portion containing mysterious rooms. And Tommy’s grandmother really does not approve of this house in particular. She knows what’s up.

There was just so much going on. Things started hitting the fan at about half way, and it just kept getting crazier from there. I also found that the ending wasn’t very surprising after I found out what was going down.

I haven’t read Golden before (apparently I’m just reading a bunch of new-to-me authors right now), but I enjoyed his writing style. I thought the novel was pretty fast-paced and entertaining. However, the characters were honesty quite annoying at times and not very consistent. I know a story like this isn’t supposed to necessarily be believable (based on the nature of the content), but this book was layered with one utterly unbelievable thing after another making it almost ridiculous. So, I’m not sure how I feel about this.

I’m planning on reading All Hallows around Halloween, maybe that one will redeem this author a bit for me!

A great thank you goes out to Christopher Golden, St. Martin’s Press, and NetGalley for this ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Dona's Books.
1,326 reviews285 followers
January 28, 2024
Thank you to the author Christopher Golden, publishers St. Martin's Press, and NetGalley for an advance digital copy of THE HOUSE OF LAST RESORT. All views are mine.

Three (or more) things I loved:

1. It's a slow build, but it gets abruptly creepy at about the 20% mark. I love this kind of step-up in tension in suspense and horror.

2. The house, where a priest once lived and before that was once a chapel owned by the Catholic church, is one of the main characters in the book. I love stories about strange houses, and this is a good one. The house seems to mirror the

3. I love the amorphous antagonist in this book. Haunted House or all of hell or only human nature?

4. I love how this book always swivels away from traditional or what may be considered "true" evil, like devils and demons, toward a more human face of evil, life grief, capitalism, or xenophobia. It creates a sord of internal dualism in the story that smarts as the reader tries to decide where they stand.

5. The trope vs. trope battle is pretty great. It's also very subtle, so a brilliant example of metahorror.

6. This book has so many unexpected turns, it's delightful! Including that wonderful last line!

Three (or less) things I didn't love:

This section isn't only for criticisms. It's merely for items that I felt something for other than "love" or some interpretation thereof.

No complaints.

Rating: 👹👹👹👹.5 / 5 new roommates
Recommend? Yes!
Finished: Jan 22 '24
Format: Digital arc, Kindle, NetGalley, SMPI
Read this book if you like:
👻 horror books
🏚 haunted house stories
🌅 new beginnings horror trope
⛪️ demon/possession stories
😵 family curses
Profile Image for Kristy Johnston.
1,282 reviews67 followers
January 28, 2024
This story is told in third person and follows Tommy and Kate. This is my fourth read by this author and my favorite so far. It had a great haunted house vibe including creepy rats, mysterious house, suspicious locals, secret rooms, creaky and cobwebby everything, plus local catacombs. I enjoyed the young couple and their reasons for uprooting their lives in America to buy a house in Sicily. Tommy had a complicated relationship with his paternal family. His father was estranged for unknown reasons, and he’s excited to be near them and get to know them better.

When they went on the tour of the local catacombs and started making plans to help the mayor with their publicity for tourism, I was utterly fascinated. The committee that formed to assist with tourism included an interesting group of people they called the “Imports”, all couples, like Tommy and Kate, that had moved to Becchina for the house deal though some had found it difficult to assimilate and left.

The closed-lip nature of Tommy’s family was a little frustrating, especially when it comes to the house. Kate has some rather crazy encounters with Tommy’s grandfather that no one else witnessed. It almost felt like she was being gaslighted at times, but when the purpose for which the Catholic Church used this house in the past was revealed, I was all in. The ending had me on the edge of my seat.

Recommended to haunted house horror lovers.

Thank you to Netgalley and St. Martin’s Press for a copy provided for an honest review.
Profile Image for Irene Well Worth A Read.
1,052 reviews114 followers
January 1, 2024
This is in part, a love story between Tommy and Kate, a mystery of what caused the rift between Tommy's father and grandfather, and the unraveling of dark family secrets.

Tommy and Kate seize an opportunity to own a beautiful house in Italy for practically no money, all they have to do is fix it up. It's a huge change for them from living in the United States, but Tommy has family there and they hope with a little time and effort they can convince some of their friends to follow in their footsteps to revive the economy in the half empty town.

When Tommy's grandmother sees which home they've chosen she is angry and fearful but won't say why.
Bumps in the night and slamming doors lead the couple to entertain the idea that their house may be haunted, but it took longer than I would have liked for the reveal of why their home is known as the House of Last Resort.
The pace was slow for the first part of the book. There were some odd occurrences but nothing really scary happened until close to the halfway mark when a shocking event led to the exposure of family secrets, Something happened at this point that just plain scared the bejeezers out of me.

The final third of the book is terrifying and the conclusion is a knock out.

My thanks to St. Martin's Press.
Profile Image for Darcia Helle.
Author 30 books737 followers
March 18, 2024
Just, no.

I’ve never been so bored while reading a “horror” novel.

I actively disliked (hated?) the main characters.

Lots of nothing going on, with a sluggish pace that wouldn’t keep up with a sloth.

Who takes days to finally explore the house they bought? Furthermore, who even buys a house without actually seeing the whole thing?

What woman hears noises during the night, somewhere in her huge mansion, while the power is out, and decides to investigate while wearing only her thong and carrying only her cell phone for the flashlight app?

And don’t even get me started on the catacombs.

Ridiculous dialogue. Ridiculous characters. Ridiculous everything.

DNF at 34%

*I received an eARC from the publisher, via NetGalley.*
Profile Image for Maddi.
54 reviews7 followers
April 16, 2024
Boring. Predictable. Also sir? Women don’t sleep in thongs. It’s uncomfortable and unhygienic. Please stop.
Profile Image for Cassie.
1,771 reviews174 followers
February 7, 2024
I don't want to say too much about the plot of The House of Last Resort, because I found the reveals to be the most rewarding part of the reading experience. So, briefly, this novel is about a young American couple who seize once-in-a-lifetime opportunity to move to Sicily, but their new home has a dark past that begins to threaten their present.

Christopher Golden is one of my go-to horror writers, but his latest offering left me feeling somewhat ambivalent. Although the plot has a lot of promise, some pacing and characterization issues made The House of Last Resort a less compelling read than it could have been.

I loved the setting: the sun-drenched island of Sicily, where the constant threat of earthquakes is at odds with the peaceful Mediterranean lifestyle. Golden imbues the town of Becchina with rich atmosphere; I almost felt like I was strolling down its narrow cobbled streets myself, inhaling the smell of bread from a sidewalk bakery and flowers from the window boxes on every row house. (It should be noted that Italy is number one on my vacation destinations list, so it doesn't take much to get me there mentally, but Golden still does a great job of setting the scene.) He contrasts the brighter parts of Becchina with its more sinister aspects: an aging population and dying tourist trade, a malevolent home with an ominous moniker, and crumbling, closed-off catacombs underneath a Catholic church. In short, it's the perfect setting for a horror novel and I was here for it.

Unfortunately, while the horror elements are unsettling, it takes a while to get to them. Golden spends the first half of the book developing the characters and their relationships, and while I do think the relationship dynamics were interesting and thoughtful (particularly the relationship between Tommy and his grandfather), I didn't necessarily love the characters themselves; I found them to be bland and one-dimensional. The third act is stellar, with some surprising reveals and bold narrative choices, but even when bad things started happening to the characters, the effect was lessened because I didn't connect with them. I also think Golden could've gone a bit farther with certain horror aspects to make this a truly frightening read. Without being too specific, the horror trope at the center of this book is the only one in the genre that ever truly scares me -- but here it didn't frighten me at all, much to my disappointment.

The House of Last Resort had lots of potential, and while overall it was entertaining enough, I finished it feeling like there was a better book lurking somewhere inside its pages. Thanks to the publisher for the complimentary reading opportunity.
Profile Image for Sheila.
923 reviews3 followers
February 13, 2024
I love the premise of this book, the execution, not so much. This started around a three stars for me and continued to go down until it dropped off a 30 foot ledge (literally) by the end of the book.

To start off I didn’t like the writing style. It read like a student who was very worried about being accused of plagiarizing a paper so they wrote every sentence in a very convoluted way. “A chapel it surely had been.” What are we Yoda?? ‘It surely had been a chapel’ would have worked just fine!

I also felt that the author told us so much of what was happening and gave us really weird backstory and asides that didn’t add anything to the plot. For example, I’m not sure why there was so much focus on their friends at home and wanting them to live in Italy and planning visits when it added nothing to the story. There was also a point where the author mentions that Kate has body dysmorphia, but it never comes up again. Or when their real estate agent comes and she wants to make sure her husband isn’t too happy to see her, because she’s not jealous - but!

This also didn’t work for me because I absolutely hated Kate and Tommy as main characters. They were so egotistical, self absorbed, and selfish. They kept going on about how they wanted to leave the New World and get back to the Old World (again why I hated the writing) to get away from late stage capitalism. Which is fine, if heavy handed, but understandable. But then please tell me why the first thing they do when they get to Italy is decide to set up a tourist trap in the catacombs they know nothing about (and literally make no effort to find out about.) The point of the program as I understood it is that more people living in the town would add to the EXISTING local businesses and their economy, not that THEY would know better and fix everything themselves. I wish this book commented on the audacity of the American tourist but I don’t think it even realized that’s what it was doing.

Other ways they suck: there’s literally a part where Tommy says that he believes that in a relationship it is the responsibility of the other person to keep you happy and if they don’t they are cruel and attacking you. He acknowledges this isn’t right and feels bad for the way he treated his wife but then goes oh well she did it too completely missing the point. After the earthquake Kate leaves one of the other Imports repeatedly to worry about her own life. Finds his husband - doesn’t tell him that his husband has been lying in the road unable to move for hours because she wants his help with HER husband. She justifies this ‘because if he really cared about his family he would have already left to find him abandoning the people he with’ and ‘his injuries aren’t life threatening anyway.’ These people were made for each other.

The plot - I didn’t even hate the real estate agent was actually in weird cult trying to bring back demons but it was all so horribly done. She’s mentioned a bunch but only shown once until she completely turns into a caricature and then falls out of the hole in the house and dies. (That whole scene was stupid. There’s an earthquake. Tommy decides to go down into the catacombs. Leaves and comes back in time to see the real estate agent holding a knife to Kate’s neck. She tells him to go back down there. He does. She doesn’t follow him so please tell me why he went all the way down there - she wouldn’t have known! Kate gets duct taped in a chair - that’s right - not TO the chair allowing her to use said chair to hit the real estate agent off the building. So much stupid going on here I couldn’t take it.)

As ridiculous as the plot was it could have worked. If these characters actually did research and found out the history of this town where the Vatican sent demons it would have been so interesting! Literally, Tommy’s grandpa had a demon in him for over 80 years! Why did we never get his grandma telling us this story?! When they had the idea for the tours of the catacombs I wish there were people in the town for it (the demon cult) and people pushing back (the ones who knew why they were sealed off). That would have been so much more creepy and interesting. Because honestly as it stands it’s very unclear as to what the plans of the demons are. He lived basically dormant in a 96 year old man so how scary is he??

I thought this would be a commentary on all the messed up things the Church did, and I was so here for it. And I think it thought it was? But it really wasn’t. There WERE demons in this book. They locked them up. The demons weren’t, with the exception of one, in the town anymore. Did other people that weren’t possessed die? Probably. Not like our two main idiots looked into it. But this book tried to condemn the church for what it did in real life (and they did and still do horrific things) while also trying to make them the heroes that help out in the end in this fictional world. You can’t have it both ways.

And the ending. I mean there’s no other way it could have ended because Golden did NO WORK in building up the lore of this world. So Tommy is possessed (because he went into the catacombs when he literally didn’t need to) and can’t overcome the demon until he throws himself off the ledge. He’s unconscious and they brought in priests (you know, the bad guys in the story) to help. And then it ended.

The book felt so incomplete. That should have been the halfway mark of the book - and it could have been if so much of the pointless filler was removed.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for ♡ Amanda Love ♡.
370 reviews688 followers
August 2, 2025
3.75⭐️ I finished this story in a day! The plot kept me turning the pages. The writing style wasn’t my favorite since I usually prefer first person over third. I also felt like the ending could’ve delivered a bit more. Still, it was an interesting read overall, and I’m super curious to see how Michael B. Jordan adapts this into a movie!
Profile Image for Carol.
3,782 reviews138 followers
Read
January 11, 2026
An American couple buys a house in Italy for a single Euro, but the house has a dark past and something sinister stirs beneath the surface.
Our young couple, Tommy and Kate Puglisi, move to a virtual ghost town in Sicily to be near Tommy's relatives and to start over. They've made the decision to give everything in their life up and just go for the adventure. The mayor, of our little town is looking to revitalize the town of Becchina. He's selling abandoned properties at a just single Euro...but there are conditions that the buyer has to meet. The buyers have to occupy the dwelling and agree to live there for at least five years and make restorations to the property. Sounds simple, doesn't it?? Just wait!

We can't be too surprised that Tommy and Kate are impulsive enough to buy in to everything. They even try to talk their friends into joining them, but they refuse. Their all alone in this venture, but off they go. Of course, we know what it means when something is "too good to be true"! don’t

Tommy’s grandparents have lived in Becchina forever, and Tommy used to visit them with his parents, but due to a family disagreement between Tommy's father and his grandfather, he hadn’t been back in several decades. Of course there was several good reasons for this. One would think that Tommy’s grandmother would have been over-joyed that they had done this, but for some reason, she wasn't just angry...she was furious. She wasn't angry that they had moved to Sicily but that they bought THAT particular house, referred to by the locals as "The House of Last Resort." It seems it had a reputation going back nearly a century as the final option for a cure for those people that were possessed by demons. Of course, no one thought to mention this at the time of the sale. We then find out that Tommy has a larger stake in this particular house than anyone knows.

The house is filled with catacombs, tunnels, rats, strange old rooms, and a war is going on between the good spirits and the evil spirits, and the weird townspeople. This story will have you on the edge of your chair.

Wait until you find out what the priests had been doing in this house all those long years…and how many people died in the strange chapel inside. Meanwhile, while the humans try to settle in, and sort things out.... down in the catacombs beneath Becchina…something stirs.
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