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Imposter Syndrome

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Maverick Justice is haunted...metaphorically.

Haunted by the memory of a famous father who never believed in him.
Haunted by the failed writing career he left in his past.
Haunted by crippling self-doubt.

When he is handed the opportunity to finish his late father's final manuscript, he believes he may be able to get his life back on track. Instead, isolated alone during the height of the COVID pandemic, he finds himself being literally haunted by the ghost of his father who doesn't seem to want him to finish the book.

Can he thwart the spirit's wishes and push through to a brighter future, or will he succumb to the dark forces enveloping him?

300 pages, Kindle Edition

Published September 15, 2025

8 people want to read

About the author

Mark Allan Gunnells

105 books138 followers

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Displaying 1 - 3 of 3 reviews
Profile Image for Books For Decaying Millennials.
235 reviews46 followers
August 14, 2025
Cheers to Slashic Horror Press, for providing with a digital ARC , in exchange for an open and honest review.
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It's 2020, the Covid-19 LockDown is in effect. Social Media of the time would have you believe that everyone was busy making sourdough bread, working remotely and generally have a sudden personal renaissance in productivity and creativity. This may have been true for some, for many it was a time fraught with anxiety, depression, and array of mental and emotional crisis that scattered to the collective populace like candy scattering from obliterated pinata.
Including in that oh so colorful array were the instances of confronting the ghosts of loved ones, both living and deceased, that sat on our minds and refused to leave.
To Read Imposter Syndrome is to return to that charged head space we all are familiar with. The writer Son of a Writer, struggles to come to terms and process being haunted. The ghosts of his own past self through failures and loss? Is it a haunting of an ontological nature? will reckoning with the shadow of his father that still looms over his life and his career cause a complete breakdown?
By the end of the book I felt an observer trapped on the wrong side of a two way mirror, pounding in the glass, screaming for someone to help.
This was devastating book to read, it tested the nerves and reduced the heart to cinders. Through following the writer (son of the writer) as they reckon with Haunts them, we as readers will think back 5 years and face what themselves back in 2020.
Profile Image for Ian Gielen.
Author 29 books75 followers
June 22, 2025
A superbly written, deeply psychological story about a man who is haunted by his own past both mentally and physically and hounded by equally deep self-doubt. It's a tragic, hearbreaking and harrowing story that kept me in its grips until the very end.

Set in the COVID isolation days, the story follows Maverick Justice, the son of a famous writer who dabbled in writing himself in the 90's. He has recently landed a lucrative book contract to revive his father's most loved series in a reboot of sorts that his father had outlined before he died. As Maverick discovers, his dad's outline was for a book that appeared to be phoned in and he decides to go in a different direction with it. Luckily the publisher agrees with his change of direction and he starts down that path.

As he begins to put pen to paper, all the insecurities and self-doubt about his writing begins to erode his confidence. His previous attempt at a writing career had ended in failure and all the added pressure from the excited public and his publisher has him falling back to old crutches to cope.

Meanwhile he has to cope with strange occurrences happening in the house and he begins to suspect the ghost of his dad who had always critisized his writing and tried to dissuade him from that course is the cause. What follows is the battle between the physical and mental with much more than Maverick's career revival at stake.

This is a book unlike any other I've read. It explores very complex themes and does it with ease which is a testament to Mark's writing skills which I've always been a fan of. Definitely one to read if you're after a masterclass of psychological horror.

Profile Image for Damascus Mincemeyer.
64 reviews7 followers
August 27, 2025
We all harbor doubts. Those niggling voices in our head that tell us we’re not as smart or attractive or popular as we’d like to think we are. That we are, somehow, imposters in our own lives. In psychiatry, the term ‘imposter syndrome’ describes individuals who experience chronic, often crippling, self-doubt. Sufferers develop a delusion that their accomplishments—particularly their professional ones—aren’t as accomplished as they believe them to be, despite all evidence to the contrary. These people feel that, no matter how skilled or talented they are, the recognition they’ve already rightly earned isn’t warranted, and fear others may expose them for the frauds they believe themselves to be.

As it so often does, the horror genre excels at exploiting such inner anxieties by manifesting them into external reality. There’s a long history in both genre literature and film of otherworldly imposters that trades on our collective paranoia that those we love most dearly might not recognize us, from the pod people doppelgängers of Invasion of the Body Snatchers and the replicating extraterrestrial menace of John Carpenter’s The Thing, to the pen-name-come-to-life terror of Stephen King’s The Dark Half. It’s a familiar, deep-rooted dread, and one that lies at the heart of author Mark Allan Gunnells’ upcoming (available September 15) Slashic Horror Press novel, Imposter Syndrome.

Maverick ‘Rick’ Justice is the middle-aged son of internationally renown bestselling author Bentley Justice, whose Senior & Junior Adventures paranormal Young Adult novels have achieved unprecedented success and earned a slavishly devoted fanbase. When Bentley dies unexpectedly of a heart attack with a partially finished manuscript for a new installment of the father-and-son supernatural series on his computer, Rick, a teacher and former writer of mass-market horror fiction under the pseudonym Rick Henry, is tapped by Doubleday in the spring of 2020 to finish the book despite the fact that Bentley once very publicly proclaimed disdain for his son’s writing.

Living in his late father’s small suburban house just as the burgeoning Covid pandemic locks the world down, Rick’s life quickly begins to spiral out of control once he settles in to write the book. Troubled by the specter of his own failed writing career and overwhelmed by the daunting prospect of upholding Bentley’s literary legacy, Rick gives in to his self-destructive tendencies and allows his previously-restrained alcoholism to reemerge unchecked. Unhappy with the lackluster plot left behind in Bentley’s notes, Rick plans to rewrite the book’s narrative to reflect his own gay lifestyle that his father frowned upon. While his editor approves of the proposed changes, Rick discovers that someone—or something—seems dead set against the book’s new direction and has unleashed its wrath upon him, deleting the newly-written chapters from his computer, dumping Rick’s HIV medication into the trash, destroying copies of his old horror novels. Rick initially thinks the occurrences are the result of an intruder, but after he sees Bentley’s shadowy shape lurking in the bedroom, he comes to believe his father’s disgruntled spirit has returned to prevent him from completing the novel. But are the happenings truly a haunting, or symptoms of Rick’s increasingly fragile mental state?

As he has with his previous horror works 324 Abercorn, 2B, Before He Wakes and Lucid, Gunnells never shies away from challenging his audience’s expectations regarding character, setting, and plot. Imposter Syndrome abounds with themes concerning identity, responsibility, self-acceptance and, ultimately, forgiveness, and the author’s penchant for crafting realistic, complex, yet deeply flawed figures is as on-point as ever. This complexity is seen most notably in the novel’s protagonist; Rick makes for a sympathetic lead, and in flashbacks we see just how the harsh familial relationship with Bentley continually corroded his self-worth, but he uses the trauma of his father’s emotional and mental abuse as an excuse for his own sometimes selfish, cowardly, lazy behavior, placing blame on Bentley for his life’s repeated downturns rather than on himself. In a clever turn, Gunnells makes Bentley a strong secondary character even though he died before the novel’s onset, and metafictional parallels can be seen between the characters of Bentley’s Senior & Junior series and his own condescending treatment of Rick throughout the years. But even here Gunnells asserts that people aren’t one-note stereotypes; Bentley may be an awful example of a cold, neglectful parent, but glimmers of a caring attitude towards Rick exist that elevate what could have been a cliché into someone more thoroughly three-dimensional.

Gunnells has long proven himself an unrivaled maestro when it comes to fostering dread, and that talent carries through in Imposter Syndrome. While it could be argued that placing the narrative so firmly in the Covid pandemic lockdown may be too close within recent historical context for comfort, like Stephen King did with Jack Torrance in The Shining, Gunnells masterfully uses Rick’s isolation to heighten the ever-growing tension. By keeping the story confined to one tiny location, a stifling claustrophobia sets in, and as the paranormal activity ramps up, Rick’s desperation to ward off his father’s malevolent presence becomes fervently palpable.

With a heady, page-turning climax that leaves no doubt as to the nature of Rick’s haunting, Imposter Syndrome closes on a pleasingly ambiguous note that brings the novel’s events full circle and proves Gunnells’ point that nobody, regardless of their actions, is beyond redemption. Coupled with its deep-rooted character study and slow-burning mystery, this is one book sure to keep readers guessing until the very end, and it’s for that reason that I’m compelled to grant it the full 5 (Out of 5) here on Goodreads. One thing’s for sure: Gunnells is certainly no imposter when it comes to creating frightful horror novels.

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