Molly Dowd Sullivan marks her debut with a thrilling urban fantasy novel that grabs you and won't let go. Dark elements of psychic infection, body horror, trauma, and tragic love play against the backdrop of a compelling murder mystery.
Liam O'Connor is special. When a Fissure opens in someone's mind, he's the one who sews it up again. When a parasite creeps through that Fissure, Liam is the exterminator who purges it. And when Liam loses everything, he's the coward who runs. But when he moves to an old house in coastal New England, hoping for isolation, something from his past follows. Fissures start tearing open; minds are devoured. People die. It's not long before Liam realizes a murderer has come to Shoalport, and he's the only one who can stop them.
Well, him, and the man who keeps haunting his dreams.
Molly Dowd Sullivan is the author of the genre-bending sci-fi novel, A LIGHT FROM THE NETHER.
Molly holds an MSc in Creative Writing from the University of Edinburgh, though she credits slash fanfiction with teaching her how to write.
While she has lived in Vermont, Italy, Scotland, and New Zealand, she now shares a little house on the New Hampshire Seacoast with her smoke show husband and a dog named Indiana Bones.
To stay up to date on releases, events, and more, check out mollydowdsullivan.com
I am going to start my review with a little side bar about how annoyed it makes me with publishers slip in massive comps on debut books which are, realistically, inaccurate and set expectations to a standard that, an otherwise decent piece of work, cannot match. This book is being comped to ‘Song of Achilles’, ‘C S Pacat’ and ‘Stephen King’ and that is forcing it to walk in some HUGE footprints, which I don’t believe it ultimately achieves. Trust me, if you want to say ‘for fans of star crossed, queer horror stories’ your audience will come, we are a hungry, feral lot.
I can say that the world building in this story is some of the most unique and creative I have experienced in some time. It’s a low fantasy story set primarily in New England and includes a complex magic system that had me glad for the author including a glossary (and at the start no less HALLELUJAH). I don’t think I can even begin to try and explain this magic system but I will say trypophobics beware cause even I felt some discomfort at times for the state the corpses were left in.
The vibes of this story were very dark, although at times seemed to skirt a little to close to the absurd, however, it was always hard to tell what was real and what was impacted by our unreliable protagonist, Liam. I thought the murder mystery was engaging, although some of the investigation elements felt a littler weaker ant times and I did find that there was a few portions of the book the dragged for me a bit.
Liam was an interesting main character to experience this story through, although not an easy one. As I mentioned above he always had an air of unreliable narrator to him and I found that his hurt, grief, trauma and alcoholism made for a heavy character to inhabit. Not to say that his pain wasn’t justified (it very much was) but at times it just started to feel like the reader was holding this heavy weight of his depression and despair for huge portions of the book, but then also was conveniently put to the side when he needed to take action?
✨slightly spoilery for discussion on the romance element✨
I thought that the concept of the romance was interesting and held a lot of potential, but found the execution to be kind of wanting. The chemistry between Liam and Jasper was so mild and subtle that it wasn’t until like 60 to 70%, when the story was spoon feeding information to the reader, that I realised finally that the love interest in the story was actually meant to be Jasper, and not Liams partner Makoto, as it had seemed for significant portions of the first half of the book to me that Liam was unknowingly in love with him and desperately grieving his loss.
And while a story including a newly awakened queer character in no ways has to address the character processing their sexuality, I did find it a little strange that at no point did Liam, a grown man around his 30s with an ex-girlfriend from a long term relationship, stop to question if he experienced attraction to men and could by bi/gay or pan?
For those that are curious, this is also a no spice book (not even a fade to black) so be aware of that if you are someone who needs that physical connection between characters to solidify an intimate connection and for it to resonate with you cause you wont find it here.
I think ultimately, whilst not without its weaknesses, that this is an example of impressive low fantasy world building, spooky atmosphere and a very solid effort for a debut. This was a 3.5 star read for me and while it would at times would fluctuate up to a 4 star read earlier on, by the end my gut instinct is to rate down. (I reserve the right to come back and change my if me feelings change after sitting on it a few days lol)
First of all, what the hell even is the story? Urban fantasy coupled with a thrilling serial murder mystery, with some horror elements (atmospheric and body horror mostly) and historical aspects woven in. Add in coastal small-town vibes, two creepy Victorian mirror houses, a love story spanning many decades, and you’re set for a very ambitious ride.
Is your mind spinning yet? In a good way, I hope!
Guys, the world-building, holy shit. Insanely interesting and elaborate with its own terminology (thank the author for the glossary included). Imagine mindscapes and different types of parasites that feed on trauma, and people with abilities to deal with these parasitic infections - and with more. Because there’s something even worse lurking around, beyond our ordinary sight, that can feast upon human minds.
And Liam O’Connor is the best person to deal with the threat, his abilities the most outstanding. He’s also an almost thirty-year-old anxious hot mess battling grief and depression, and very much doesn’t want to be the best person. I think some readers could find him frustrating but I found Liam’s struggles very relatable. A gifted kid molded into a tool whose job slowly whittles away at his mental health. And when he finally arrives at the conclusion he doesn’t want to do this anymore, he simply can’t do this anymore... people refuse to let him go, making him feel responsible for everyone.
I couldn’t help but feel for this very reluctant hero. His unraveling state of mind, his doubt and self-hatred, created an uncomfortably cloying and claustrophobic atmosphere for most of the story.
Then there’s Jasper Knox. Oooh but Jasper is lovely. I won’t say much about him, but look - tall, dark and handsome, deliciously snarky and sarcastic, standoffish, brusque... wears an ascot. He’s also, possibly, maybe, not really alive? Who knows, I certainly won’t tell 🤭
And calling the book a romance wouldn’t fit, so definitely don’t expect that, but there IS a heartbreaking love story, with a soulmate situation that worked incredibly well for me. No instant lovesickness, just a connection both Liam and Jasper are befuddled by. One more warning, though: don’t expect any kind of steam. None. Not even fade to black, sorry!
The mystery and suspense really propelled the story forward. It took me quite a while to read just because my brain wouldn’t shut the hell up, throwing theories at me left and right, and generally being a nuisance - although it did make for an engaging reading experience. It’s been a while since I’ve had so much fun being suspicious of everything (and my main theory ended up being correct and it was so satisfying!)
The book isn’t perfect though, the first twenty percent is a bit slow-paced, and there are definitely a few logical inconsistencies and unexplained details - but it’s not hard to just go with the flow. I was insanely inquisitive because the world-building truly caught my attention, I can imagine it being expanded upon in a series!
The writing also took me a bit to get used to; it consists mostly of shorter, sharp sentences that are usually effective for creating tension, but the overuse can affect the flow of the story. Nevertheless, I feel like it either got better, or I truly got used to it.
Despite some flaws, I don’t think I’ll forget how this book made me stare at the wall and contemplate, shout at my e-reader, and even shed a tear. I’m itching to pre-order a physical copy so I can one day do a proper reread and annotate because my mind is still spinning. Seriously - what a treasure of a debut! ❤️
Thank you to Netgalley and Wendelton Press for the opportunity to read this e-arc, it’s been a pleasure!
I received an ARC in exchange for an honest review.
A Light From the Nether is a contemporary urban fantasy that blends aggressively millennial references with Victorian-era forbidden romance and a dash of immaculate body horror, all wrapped up in a mystery. The story opens with Liam, barely an adult and already wrung out by his career, suffering a cataclysmic breakdown after a job goes wrong.
First off, I have to say how grateful I am for the inclusion of a glossary *at the start* of the novel, making sure it's spoiler-free and a safe reference point. I think I would have been completely lost without it, even if the narration did a good job explaining the finer points while the reader discovered them, it was just a lot to hold onto! As for the story itself: from the very beginning, the atmosphere just leaps off the page. The humor is witty and so dry, perfectly matching the somber mood. The body horror elements are deliciously creepy and work incredibly well.
For about 60% (or more?) of the book, I was absolutely in love with the novel and what it was going for. The buildup is strong, and the red herrings keep the mystery compelling. However, some of the final twists ended up being either predictable or disappointments. There were a few cop-outs that weren’t foreshadowed enough, and some details unravelled under scrutiny. Without getting into spoilers, I feel like the author fell into a trap of wanting to tie up too many threads together and ended up with something a bit messy, a bit shaky, and which left a few plot holes behind since there was *so much* already.
Even with my lukewarm feelings about the final reveals, I still had a fantastic time reading this book. The characters were touching, and I loved the bond they shared (I also appreciated the character art at the end!). The worldbuilding is rich and genuinely unique, something I haven’t seen before, and the writing is competent and engaging. In the end, I’d rate this novel at a 4.25-4.5 stars, but I’m rounding it up to 5. I’d recommend it to (hear me out) Destiel aficionados (don’t judge me) and fans of Victorian whodunnits. The marketing compares the book to C.S. Pacat, but for me, it was much closer to a K.J. Charles!
Edit: I just found out the author (bless any and all fanfiction writers out there) is going to release an appendix for this book! Looks like Liam is gonna get laid after all- and who am I to say no to telepathy and dream sharing??
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I know I could start this review with a fancy quote and all of that, but... nope, not doing that. I don't think I have the mental capacity left for that because what the fuck??
I often feel like diving into a book with relatively high expectations isn't really a good idea. And for the first 130 or so pages I thought this applied here as well. Up until that point, everything sort of felt like set-up for the things that were about to happen (god, were they about to happen). I also didn't always understand the pop culture references and didn't care enough to look them up- so everything they did was take me out of the story. The humor sometimes just didn't land. And let's not forget that Faye (a side character) was annoying as fuck.
Right.
And then everything kind of went to shit. It just got progressively worse (for the characters and my poor nerves). I honestly didn't see any of this coming, and I didn't know who to suspect anymore. That is, until the author dropped the first hint as to who might be our murderer and I was just like- Wait. You cannot be serious. You're kidding me, right?? Well. No, but I sure started to heavily question my judgment (is that what gaslighting your reader looks like?).
The world-building was definitely what initially kept me reading. It took a bit to get used to all those newly introduced terms, but I only really needed the glossary for the first few chapters. There's actually a lot more to it than first meets the eye! By which I mean- it gets a bit more... complicated. But that's what makes it so interesting.
And last but not least, the romance fit in so well! I wouldn't say it was the sole focus of the story, but for me it was the one element that tied everything neatly together. I was just sitting on the edge of my seat trying to figure out what the hell had happened in the past and what role it played in the mess going down in the present timeline.
I was debating whether to give this 4 or 5 stars, but you know what? It's a debut novel and currently sits at 20 ratings total. It deserves 5 stars for the sheer amount of mental distress it has caused me.
"Perhaps your sense of responsibility for the lives of strangers is crippling you." "Funny, I thought that's what made me a good person."
★★★
A cool blend of murder mystery with some mindfuckery which I am always here for. As other reviewers have pointed out already, the worldbuilding is really where this book shines. Liam our unfortunate protagonist has the ability to delve into minds in order to extricate what are essentially mind parasites. In fact, he's one of the best at it and uses this impressive talent in order to solve crimes. I have encountered similar setups like this before across different forms of media, but that doesn't stop this book from being as crazy as it sounds. Even though there's a lot of random jargon being thrown around, once you get a grasp on them you realize that they're really just shiny terms for some easily graspable concepts.
The murder mystery also heavily ties in with the supernatural elements of the plot and, while the two often worked great together, I found the mystery to be a bit lackluster given the identity of the murderer being pretty clear after a short while. I never had an "aha" moment. The author has a lot to say here about trauma and self deprecation and while there are certain moments that really hit you in the feels, a lot of it came across as a bit heavy-handed to me.
The romance in A Light from the Nether was subtle, complete with . Normally I would absolutely be EATING this up though, but here everything just ended up being a bit meh as well and I can't pinpoint exactly why. I think it boils down to the fact that there was just too much going on outside of the romance for us to get invested in it fully.
Some of the character voices also rubbed me the wrong way. Like these people who end up being good friends with Liam are just like "no way man we're cool, just a bunch of chill nerds who like nerdy things like studio ghibli and sit around and play board games man not like these other people." 🙄🙄🙄 There's a lot of humor used in an attempt to balance out some of the dark stuff, but the author's sense of humor isn't my cuppa tea. Just an example: Sadly, instances like this really prevented me from totally falling in love with this debut.
4.5 stars This book is a hidden gem that I need everyone to find so we can scream about it together. I went into this mostly blind, and was pleasantly surprised by how perfect this was for me. No seriously, this is what I’m always searching for. The vibes were so unique I don’t know how to explain them without spoiling everything, but I’m gonna try. A man running from his past ends up in a small town hoping for a new start and instead ends up back in business trying to solve a new string of murders. A Light from the Nether has everything I could possibly want in a fantasy book: a realm that only the main character can traverse, lost memories, murder mystery, a ghost love interest, and my favorite niche trope: mind communication. I immediately connected with the main characters and the romance had me on the edge of my seat. I wasn’t prepared for this book to break my heart and put it back together again but I was smiling ear to ear by the end so definitely read this if you want to feel every emotion possible. A Light from the Nether is a standalone that wraps up perfectly, but the author is writing a spicy bonus story that I am going to be feral for once I get my hands on it. I think you will love this book if you also liked The Corruption of Hollis Brown, A Study in Drowning, Evocation, When Among Crows, and Sorcery and Small Magics!
I’m slightly speechless….this was so good!!! The writing and story got me instantly hooked. The story was very unique (I’ve personally never read anything like it) I also loved the horror elements in this. I’ll definitely be on the look out for when this author comes out with more books!
I received an ARC copy of what is, without a doubt, the best book I’ve read. Molly Dowd Sullivan has created pure magic with this creepy, delightful, and gorgeous mystery. It is equal parts thrilling, hilarious, heart wrenching, and eerie. I genuinely cannot wait to read this again (and again).
When I started this book, I immediately knew this could be a solid 4, even 5, star read for me. The world building was unique and immersive from the very first page; the characters seemed right up my alley - quirky, clever, emotionally repressed; plus, it’s a murder mystery. It literally has everything I wish for in a story and yet, by the end, I can only give it 3 stars.
I had two major problems with this book: 1. There was too much exposition. Especially after the 70% mark where the plot twists begin arriving one after the other, the revelations that tie the mystery together are delivered through a dream sequence that feels rushed and overly told. With barely any time to digest what’s going on, I was constantly feeling confused and underwhelmed. 2. The romantic subplot, which ultimately becomes crucial for the resolution of the case, fell flat for me. ****SPOILERS AHEAD**** For all the “we loved each other in another life” melodrama (and believe me, I’m ALL for that kind of twist), I struggled to connect the characters from the past and the protagonists in the present. Liam has more chemistry with Makoto (whom I adored from page one; imagine my face when the Prologue ended) than with Jasper, if only because he spends the majority of the book mourning him. I’m mad that the tragedy of Jasper and William’s story didn’t reach me as much as it was supposed to, but the execution didn’t leave much room for attachment.
That said, this was still a nice October read, thanks to its increasingly disturbing descriptions of the victims physical and psychological states. The mystery was engaging enough, so while it didn’t quite reach the emotional heights I hoped for, I would recommend this as a spooky, original read.
I’ve been longing and yearning for so very long for a mature, non-YA, genre/fantasy novel with complex plot alongside an mlm romance and I’m absolutely delighted to have found it in A Light from the Nether. I don’t usually write reviews but this is one of the best books I’ve read in years so I’m making an exception in hopes that it helps this story get some more traction because gosh, I really need more people to rave over this with (and fic to read…). It has literally everything I’ve been searching the physical and online bookshelves for. The writing is smart, distinctive, and has so much depth. The Victorian historical elements combined with the modern setting are an honest delight. And the worldbuilding is so cool: the whole psychic system of Fissures, Sophonts, Trypanons, Wedges, and Splints was so fun to learn about and the author mixed them into real-world history so completely that you feel it’s almost an alternate-history story despite taking place in 2018. There is not a lot of exposition despite the complex psychic system the author has created; rather, the reader learns the system in more and more detail as the tale progresses (with help from a glossary of terms). And finally the queer romance…by the end of the book I was genuinely weeping over it and the revelations about these characters (recommend going in with no spoilers!). I loved that the romance served the plot rather than the other way around, and there were no “spicy” scenes shoehorned into a situation in which they would honestly be unnecessary. I don’t read romance for smut so this was refreshing for me.
In any case, highly recommend for anyone who likes Eldritch-ish fantasy/horror, Victorian and Northeast Coastal history, ghosts stories, “haunted” houses, detective cases (got some Agatha Christie vibes!), mature adult characters (in/near their 30s), tragic backstories, ANGST ANGST ANGST, and soulmate-level romances. I hope you love it as much as I did!!
I wasn't sure what to expect when I started to read this book and boy was not not disappointed. What a marvelous debut urban fantasy!
Liam is what's called a Trypanon, he can walk where others cannot and can open/close Fissures. He has spent his whole life being "special" and also being used by FUSE for his talents. These skills wear on him mentally and physically and one day he's not sure what will be left of him.
After a tragic incident he travels back to the seaside town that the used to spend with highly religious grandparents. He hopes to be left alone but the town has other plans as local law enforcement/FUSE pull him back into a serious of unexpected events that pulls him back into work he wanted to leave behind.
This story is full of unexpected twists, especially after Liam starts having nighttime visitations from the mysterious Jasper that he seems to have a connection to.
This is an exciting mix of urban fantasy, romance and murder mystery. I was guessing until the end who the real culprit was and who was/was not on Liam side. This was a story of confronting what you fear, overcoming grief and allowing yourself to open up to others. I spent a lot of this story wanting to give both Jasper and Liam a big old hug.
The burn is extremely slow and feels earned once you get there. I do with the epilogue has been a tad longer. And if anything would have happened to Kermit there would have been riots on my end!
Although I obviously couldn't understand fully Liam struggle he was incredibly relatable in the face of grief and allowing yourself ot heal. I'd read so many other stories in this world! This was a creative story and I couldn't put it down!
Thank you NetGalley and Victory Editing for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Absolutely fantastic. The author captivates the reader from the get-go. The author’s effort that went in to ensuring alignment with real-life mental health struggles and the depth human connection can go is clear. Well done.
Ha mezclado suspense, misterio, fantasía, psicología y romance en una misma historia y ha hecho magia!. La parte que más quiero destacar es la narración, es maravillosa! A momentos me daba cierto susto porque la narración está tan bien hecha que me ha hecho sentir, inconscientemente, justo lo que la autora quiere, ya sea miedo, tristeza o tensión. Creo que hace mucho tiempo que no leía una historia tan bien narrada y con un plot tan bien conjurado. La segunda cosa que destacó: el plot está perfectamente diseñado, donde los personajes principales tienen el mayor desarrollo y los secundarios, a pesar de no tener el mismo peso en la trama, encajan perfectamente con todo y le dan el toque final a lo que ya es una buena construcción del mundo. Todo encaja con todo. Al inicio puede parecer que está todo muy disperso, pero a medida que avanza la historia las piezas van encajando a la perfección, hasta formar un cuadro único.
Que bien me lo he pasado teorizando en mi cabeza quien es el asesino, descubriendo los pormenores del Nether y de la historia de los personajes.
Wow. This book is awesome. I legitimately couldn't put it down. The story is captivating and original - I've never read a book like this before. I haven't felt this excited about a book since Harry Potter. This is easily in my top 5 favorite reads of all time. I will definitely be reading this again.
A Light From the Nether is a new queer fantasy novel that has some truly incredible and creative world-building. It's largely set in our world, but there's a horrifying mirror world that can occasionally leak into ours. That world is called The Nether, and it is full of parasitic monsters called Flukes that feast on human souls. When those come through fissures and attack humans, it is Liam's job to destroy the Flukes and close up the breach.
Liam is a Trypanon, an extremely rare person who can move between our world, known as The Walking World, and The Nether. This isn't an exciting and fun portal-hopping fantasy career, though! The Nether is traumatizing, and the Flukes inflict gruesome damage to their hosts. If Liam could, he would abandon this draining and dangerous job for good, but he's quickly pulled back into the fray when a series of strange deaths start occurring.
This book genuinely had one of the best prologues that I've read in ages. In just a few pages, it introduces the world and the main character expertly. I was hooked immediately, which is so rare for me with a fantasy novel.
The characters in this are flawed and complicated. Liam, in particular, is struggling at the beginning of the book. He's been exposed to some truly horrific scenes, and he's also repressing a childhood trauma. He is not in a good place. Liam meets Jasper in an unusual way, and the two strike a deal to help each other solve the mystery of what is going on in their town.
The love story that develops between them is epic and a very slow burn. There's no spice, and the romance is only one aspect of the plot, but it's wonderfully done; I got so emotionally invested in this pair! It's also a really unique relationship. I don't want to give anything away, but their dynamic is very different than the average romance. There are some big twists and reveals with them that blew me away, too!
The mystery part of the plot is engaging and well-plotted. There was never a moment in this where I felt bored or wished the story moved faster. It was paced perfectly with bits of information being revealed regularly. Every thing comes together in shocking and satisfying ways.
There were points when I seriously couldn't put this book down! A big part of me really wanted to slow down reading this book so I could really savor it, but I absolutely had to know what was happening next! I was up far too late reading this because I truly couldn't stop reading!
This book is one of the biggest surprises of the year for me. I had no expectations when I sat down to start reading this. The blurb sounded interesting, and I thought I might like it, but this is a debut with under 10 ratings on Goodreads (at the time I started reading it). To say I was unprepared by how much I would end up loving this is an understatement!
A Light From the Nether is utterly unique and captivating, and I genuinely loved every second of reading it. This is one of my favorite books I've read in recent years, and it's a strong contender for my best book of the year! I very highly recommend it to fans of queer stories, mysteries, and dark fantasy! It has some gore and some dark content, but if you can handle it, you will be rewarded with a phenomenal love story and an incredibly well-written, emotional, and surprising book!
* I received an advanced copy of this book for free, thanks to NetGalley & the publisher. *
i am CRAZY about this book, it has been buzzing around my skull all week and i've been racing to finish it and now that i have, i couldn't be CRAZIER for it!!!
THIS RIGHT HERE. THIS is what my sci-fi, cop drama, small town big problem, supernatural mental monsters, 'genius who drinks himself silly' character loving, adhd meets autism pairing enjoying, supernatural mental monsters, butt wanted!!!! AND THAT'S EXACTLY WHAT I GOT!!! everything about this book drove me wild.
okay, so, when i saw it was a 300+ page book with a glossary at the start, i got scared, but after doing a little googling and finding out that the author is a fanfic author, i felt a little more safe to keep reading. and boy, am i glad i did. by page 20 i was intregued, by page 50 i was interested, by page 150 i was hooked, and by page 277 (miss molly dowd sullivan how could you DO THAT TO ME) i was locked in and refusing to move until i finished the book.
this book feels familiar to me in a way i can't explain - the mechanics of this world are a little overwhelming at first, but as the story unfolds and envelops these unknown terms, they come to me like remembering to learn a bike, like i've always known what a fluke and a wick are. familiar, recognisable, but in an entirely new way that had me, an autistic person who loves to guess the ending and find the twist, with not a SINGLE clue of where this would end up.
i honestly can't and won't shut up about this. it's getting five stars and it's going on the favourites shelf. mwah. mwah mwah mwah mwah.
SPOILER-FREE REVIEW: A Light From the Nether. // ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (4/5 stars)
*thank you to net galley and the author for an e-ARC of this novel*
While this is not a genre I typically read— A Light From the Nether was a surprising, dark, and exciting read. It’s a queer dark fantasy with heavy horror and sci-fi elements, and once I got past the dense opening, I couldn’t stop reading.
Fair warning: the first 10% throws a lot at you (terminology, world-building, and lore). It’s a little disorienting, so I recommend sticking around until at least this point, where the character stakes start to ramp up.
The writing is atmospheric, vivid, and at times deeply unsettling. There are moments of body horror that made my skin crawl—in the best way—and the way the author brings the mirror world of The Nether to life is unlike anything I’ve read before.
The story follows Liam, a rare person who can travel between our own world and The Nether (similar to the upside down from Stranger Things) where parasitic soul-eating creatures called Flukes lurk.
After a traumatic event, Liam tries to hide from destiny, ending up in a sleepy east-coast town. However, he quickly gets pulled back in when strange deaths, defying the known rules of the Nether, begin to occur. That's when he meets Jasper (their first real conversation is about 30% through the book), a mysterious man that seems to be haunting him-and is somehow tied to the murder mystery Liam must solve.
If you enjoy:
* low-spice, high-stakes queer romance
* body horror that will make your skin crawl
* sci-fi/horror blend
* mind bending portal fantasy
* characters that will make you laugh out loud
* soul-ties —then A Light From the Nether should be on your radar. It’s quirky, deeply emotional, and beautifully written. I'm glad I went out of my comfort zone to try this book.
**4.5/5 Stars** (Love that Goodreads won’t allow my Libra self to give half-stars…)
I looked forward to reading this book every day. I wasn’t ready for it to end so I took my time with it. Echoing other reviewers before me, WHOA, the WORLD BUILDING. Insane, impressive, and so creative (and well executed). The concept of the Nether and all the things that relate to it and inhabit it was captivating. Although the book was dark, deep, and full of emotion, the author’s engaging writing style offered opportunities for quirky, witty banter, which allowed for some levity. It worked seamlessly with this plot and set of characters.
Overall, I’d absolutely recommend this book. As a fantasy, romance, thriller, historical fiction, and character development reader, this checked every box.
Honorable mention: as a Millennial, I appreciated all the Millennial references in this book. They put a smile on my face every time I came across one.
This was such a great, creepy read that I didn't know I was missing. At first I wasn't certain what sort of story I was walking into with the definitions and such listed on the first few pages, however, once the story started, I was hooked. It was such an interesting concept. This is a world where there are parasites of the mind, and mindscapes which are hellacious to those who are able to perceive them. The hosts are fed upon by the parasites and only certain people are skilled enough to sever the ties between the host and parasites and try to close the fissures linking the parasitic world to our own.
Liam is one of the skilled people who is able to "wedge" himself between the host and parasite to sever the attachments and try to close the fissures which allow them access. However, Liam and his partner encounter a scenario which goes wrong and Liam loses more than he can stand. After the job, he quits the business and refuses to insert himself into those types of situations again. He even leaves Chicago and heads towards the Northeast to try and escape his past which still haunts him.
There is quite a bit of body horror, self-deprecation, and mental horror. I thin that's what gives this book such an eerie atmosphere. The worldbuilding is really well done and I think the small town gives me the same spookiness I feel when I read a Stephen King book. This is one I will definitely reread in the future!
The publisher set me up for a giant disappointment on this one. The publisher said for fans of Song of Achilles, C.S. Pacat and Stephen King. Those are some big claims. So I expected a lot from this book.
I expected heartbreak and sweetness (SOA), and actual horror (Stephen King). My favorite trilogy ever is written by Pacat so I expected intrigue, enemies to lovers, sequel tension. Everything lifted above was not in there.
We didnt even meet the love interest until halfway through the book, and honestly, I didnt really see any development of interest or of their relationship, it just happened. The only horror there really was, was descriptions of the bodies taken over by Flukes. There was also no heartbreak. Nothing resembling the three things the publisher claimed.
The book itself wasn't bad. They did spend too long on Calico's depression and not long enough on plot progression, I also didnt really have any attachment to any of the characters. The idea behind the story was really unique though, and if the publisher didn't set my expectations so high, I might have enjoyed this book more than I did. This is in no way the author's fault though.
An original and compelling debut from an author to watch. A Light From the Nether skips through genres with manic glee, combining a twisted historical ghost story with parasitic sci-fi and an elegantly restrained queer romance. Our hot mess of a hero, Liam, is being emotionally eaten alive by his extraordinary power to navigate the Nether, a grotesque underworld built of trauma and nightmares. When he retreats to his seaside New Hampshire ancestral home, people start turning up dead, and the answer to finding the killer seems to lie with the irritatingly refined ghost who has recently taken up residence in Liam's head. This one gave me the vibes of classic 1970s Stephen King horror but with wild worldbuilding and a hell of a lot more character development.
Part horror, part police procedural, part fantasy mindbending mystery. There are a lot of moving parts to this book, and they're all handled (mostly) perfectly. The world building was intense, and it really throws you into the deep in with the glossary at the beginning, but things are slowly revealed and explained in the world so that it's easier to digest.
Every single character is perfect. The mystery is amazing. The romance is tender, sweet, and more than a little trippy in an Eternal Sunshine type of way. I loved every second I spent with it.
The beginning of this book is gripping! There were a few word choices/analogies that were weird. The writing was good though I often felt disconnected from the story because of the terms used that we have a glossary for in the beginning of the book. I think if normal terms were used the disconnect would not be there.
Spoilers ahead:
I'm not a big fan of reincarnation at all, so when we got to that bit in the story I was kind of put off. Also, I read this because it's advertised as queer fiction but I didn't get the sense that Liam was anything but straight the whole book.
I was fortunate enough to get an advanced copy of this book. Imaginative world building is always a hook for me, and this book delivered a fully realized world with internally consistent jargon, organizations, and philosophies.
Oh, and the characters and story are also excellent. Liam is flawed and believable. The New England community he joins is populated with more than just caricatures (and maybe a ghost).
This book has the triple threat: world building, engaging plot, and characters dealing with the human condition.
I was immediately drawn into the world of this book - hooked from the first page to the last. Reading something so close our world yet so different was surprisingly refreshing even in the midst of its complex layers of emotional trauma and graphic depictions of body horror. I'm a total horror lightweight but none of that felt extraneous or too out there for me to be able to enjoy/immerse myself in the world of this book.
A Light from the Nether was well written, engaging, and immersive - I highly recommend!
I was hooked from the very beginning! Sullivan's writing is so immersive and richly detailed. The reader is plunged right into the story from the start. It's my favorite kind of horror novel -- wickedly funny and absolutely terrifying. I cackled more than once and at one point gasped so loudly I thoroughly freaked out my wife. Exquisite world-building, wonderful queer representation, and an ending that was so good I couldn't put the book down for the final 25% (seriously thought about taking the day off work so I could finish it!).
A Light From the Nether is a rare feast: part police procedural, part psychological thriller, with the whole of it folded into urban fantasy, body horror, mystery, dark comedy, and historical fiction. And yet, beneath it all pulses a queer love story—one that defies time, form, and the bounds of emotional complexity.
The novel resists easy allegiance. It conjures a world where ambiguity and immateriality are not side effects but the very structure of existence. Here, the torments of the mind become flesh, and existential questions of right, wrong, and mortality seep into every gesture.
Throughout, tight, evocative language weaves sensory mindscapes that consume and subvert, splintering perception as they unwind. In a world where you hear with your eyes and taste with your touch, anything proves possible.
This is partly due to the grammar of reality Sullivan constructs. Where language not only reflects but remakes the world, Liam, our protagonist, is left shifting between brutalised psyches in a relentless effort to help them heal.
Faced with loss and horror greater than anything he’s known before, he begins to feel his own mind slipping into an essence not entirely his. Still, nothing compares to what comes next: a becoming that undoes all else.
A Light From the Nether asks you to shed your assumptions and, perhaps, a few hours of sleep. Dreamlike in places, nightmarish in others, it consumes and reconfigures from the inside out. There is nothing left to do but submit to the devourment. [Full review available here]
Truly singular. I tore through this. The world-building is wholly unique. Characters are well-drawn, distinct, and deep. And at its core is a page-turner of a mystery with an incredibly emotional payoff.
Normally, I'd say some of these genre tags aren't the typical things I gravitate towards, but honestly I don't think it mattered. This book kind of pushes past genre in lots of different directions and exists totally on its own terms. A truly badass novel. Can't believe it's a debut! More, please.