Every once in a while, a debut comes along that makes you stop, take notice, and think, this author is going places. Kill Call by Jeff Wooten is exactly that kind of book. A supernatural thriller with a sharp edge, a fast pulse, and surprising emotional depth, it had me glued from chapter one.
Let’s start with the premise—because it’s absolutely gripping. Jude, the protagonist, is born with a rare and terrifying gift: he dreams about murders before they happen, seeing them through the eyes of the killer. That alone is chilling. But what elevates this story is that Jude doesn’t just witness these crimes—he acts on them. Trained from childhood by his father, who shares the same gift, Jude is expected to prevent these deaths in the most extreme way possible: by killing the would-be murderer before they strike. It's a brutal moral framework—an eye for an eye—and Wooten explores this theme with nuance and tension throughout.
Where many thrillers stick to one speed, Kill Call balances pulse-pounding moments with quiet, thoughtful beats. When Jude's latest mission goes sideways—because the victim, Hanna, manages to save herself—it throws everything into chaos. Hanna is not your typical damsel or plot device. She's smart, grounded, and wonderfully real. Her interaction with Jude turns the book in a whole new direction, shifting it from “murder-prevention mission” to “what happens when fate is disrupted?”
The plot never lags, and the tension builds masterfully. But what I truly appreciated is the internal conflict. Jude is not a typical teenage hero. He’s haunted, conflicted, and constantly questioning whether the path his father set him on is just. There’s something incredibly human about his doubts, his loneliness, and his desire for something resembling a normal life—even as he knows he’ll never have one.
Wooten’s writing is confident and atmospheric. The dream sequences are vivid and unnerving, and the way he crafts suspense without relying on gore or cheap scares is genuinely impressive. The themes—destiny, moral responsibility, identity—are handled with care but never slow the pace. And for a debut, the voice is polished, sharp, and memorable.
This is a novel that feels like it could easily be adapted for the screen. It has that cinematic quality—the kind where you can almost hear the soundtrack behind the words, feel the chill in the air during the nightmares, and see the haunted look in Jude’s eyes.
If you're a fan of authors like Neal Shusterman, Mindy McGinnis, or even early Stephen King, Kill Call is a must-read. It's bold, original, and unapologetically dark—but with just enough light to keep you hoping.
A standout debut. Five stars, without hesitation. I cannot wait to see what Jeff Wooten writes next.