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Abyss

Not yet published
Expected 12 May 26
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Severance meets Lovecraft in this surreal tale of corporate horror and existential dread.

Joe always had potential, but he doesn't expect much, and he hopes that his new job as an admin assistant won't expect much of him. But when he enters the offices of Ponos—a company he's never heard of and knows nothing about—he discovers that potential is exactly what they want from him.

A feverish dive into the inhumanity of both late-stage capitalism and the crippling anxieties of modern life, Abyss adds a new level of meaning to 'wage slave'.

160 pages, Hardcover

Expected publication May 12, 2026

3 people are currently reading
6534 people want to read

About the author

Nicholas Binge

6 books645 followers
Nicholas Binge is a bestselling author of speculative thrillers that blend big sci-fi concepts with psychological horror. His latest novel, Dissolution, was hailed as one of the best thrillers of 2025 by The New York Times and is being adapted into a major motion picture by Sony Pictures, with Oscar-nominated screenwriter Eric Heisserer (Arrival, Birdbox) penning the script.

His breakout novel Ascension was a New York Times Editor's Choice Pick, finalist for the Goodreads' Choice Awards and Ignotus Award, and named a best book of 2023 by Vulture, Goodreads, The LA Times, and The Sunday Times. It is also being adapted for film. His work has been translated into over a dozen languages and featured across major international outlets from The Guardian to Entertainment Weekly.

Binge has lived across Asia and Europe — from Singapore to Switzerland to Hong Kong —before settling in Edinburgh, where he lectures in Creative Writing at Edinburgh Napier University and co-hosts the Binge Reading Book Club podcast. Beyond fiction, he has written for The Guardian, Literary Hub, and other leading outlets, and is a regular speaker at book festivals across Scotland and the UK.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 51 reviews
Profile Image for Erin.
3,142 reviews413 followers
November 16, 2025
ARC for review. To be published May 12, 2026.

3 stars

The story of a loner who goes to work in what appears to be a nearly empty office building and all the insanity that follows. The story had promise in a THERE IS NO ANTI-EMETICS DIVISION way but this didn’t have the scope of that superior book. There were parts that were interesting, though.
Profile Image for Becky Spratford.
Author 4 books829 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
April 1, 2026
Review on the April 2026 issue of Library Journal

Three Words That Describe This Book: intense disorientation, Lovecraftian, Tech/corporate horror combo

Other words, rise of machines, terrifyingly realistic, first person-- Joe.


Draft Review: Opening with a single-page chapter ominously set “Inside, Second Instance, 27 Seconds,” that replays a conversation between Joseph and “Wellbot”, a conversation ending with Joseph reaching forward to type back, “perhaps for the last time.” Unsettled and shaken, readers are transported back to the beginning, when Joseph, a young man slowly losing his connection to the real world, finds a job that seems too good to be true. Arriving at an empty building on his first day, Joseph struggles to find his desk and upon logging in, is forced to deal with WellBot’s demands. When his human supervisor slips Joseph a piece of paper with an elaborate equation, things quickly move from odd to intensely disorienting to existentially terrifying. Readers will get swept up in Joseph’s epic battle with the monster at the heart of the building, all to keep hold of his humanity, no matter the cost to the wider world.

Verdict: The accurate Severance meets Lovecraft marketing will help the right readers find this novella. For fans of books as different as The Dead Take the A Train by Richard Kadrey and Cassandra Khaw, The Warehouse by Rob Hart, and Coup de Grace by Sofia Ajram.

First, read this novella in as few sittings as possible-- it is meant to be experiences. You will feel the disorientation as Joe gets trapped in his new place of work and cannot get out.

Now on the rest of the review.

Binge sets the disorientation from the start with a chancer labelled -- Inside, Second Instance 27 second. It is ominous. Then we pull back to meet Joe. A young man who has lost connection in the real world. He has no job, no friends, barely talks to his mother who he loves but doesn't seem to have time after all his internet scrolling to visit or call back.

He gets a job that seems easy enough. When he goes to work no one is there but he finds his way, logs into the WelBot AI a 2001 HAL like program that seems to know everything about him.

And well, things are not as they seem as this is a horror novel. The few people he meets are odd and never seem to leave. And now Joe can't seem to leave eaither-- nothing that he even wants to.

Those "Inside" mini chapters pop up a few more times as well.

Readers follow Joe even as time becomes more of a construct. But there is adventure here and there is a monster at the heart of it all.

Despite the disorientation-- done on purpose by the author to help the reader be in synch with Joe-- the story moves swiftly and easily. The details come at the right pace. A solid 1 -2 sitting story that is not what readers will expect going in-- in a good way.

Readalikes-- 100% for fans of The Dead Take the A Train by Kadrey and Khaw. Also Blake Crouch, The Warehouse by Rob Hart. Any corporate techno or Lovecraftian horror. Also Travlers Rest by Kieth Lee Morris (a backlist fav of mine). Coup de Grace by Ajram as well-- but Abyss is was more techy.
Profile Image for James.
464 reviews37 followers
November 24, 2025
I read this fun, freaky little novella in one sitting! If you like your existential dread in bite-sized packages, this is perfect for you!

Joe had a lot of promise but got lost somewhere along the way. Now he's lonely, struggling, and jobless, but his new position at a mysterious corporation may take him to horrific new depths.

Severance is probably a good comp but I haven't watched it, so I'm going to say this book is like The Stanley Parable but specifically that one bit where you get trapped walking in a loop in the basement like Silent Hill. Now that I have compared this book to two video games, I can proceed with the review! Anyway, this was a fun cosmic/existential/corporate horror with a lot of themes that will resonate with you if you've become numb to the parasitic effect of large corporations and social media on your health and well-being. It's got great liminal vibes and some moments of body horror which I'm a fan of. It ended really abruptly and in a way that doesn't really make it clear how Joe escaped the Big Bad, but it doesn't sour the book as a whole or anything.

If you just need a little horror pick-me-up (or a put-me-down) I think tis is a great pick and it makes me want to check out Nicholas Binge's other stuff!

Thank you to Nicholas Binge and Tor Nightfire for this ARC in exchange for my full, honest review!

Happy reading!
Profile Image for CadmanReads.
418 reviews22 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 6, 2026
Abyss is another striking, thought-provoking release from Nicholas Binge. I went into this having loved his previous work, especially Ascension, so my expectations were high, and once again Binge delivered a story that’s clever, unsettling, and difficult to put down.

One of the things that makes Abyss feel particularly effective is its modern-day setting and an immediately relatable protagonist. He’s someone many readers will recognise: intelligent and capable, but stuck in familiar ruts, prone to habits of self-sabotage, and quietly aware that he has never quite lived up to the productivity and potential that people around him seem to expect. When he’s given a new role, the question hanging over the story is whether this change might finally unleash the productivity and focus that everyone believes he should have.

At first, the book feels like science fiction, but as the narrative unfolds, it becomes clear that Binge is crafting something closer to horror. It reads like a novella very much of its time, tapping into contemporary anxieties such as the rise of AI, the fear of workplace automation, and the unsettling idea of being controlled, monitored, or reduced to a tool by the very systems and employers we work for. Beneath the surface is a quiet but powerful commentary on the influence of elites, corporate power, and the fragile sense of agency many people feel in modern work culture.
On a surface level, Abyss can be read as a strange, eerie office-based horror story set in an oddly mundane but fascinating location. Underneath that is a much deeper exploration of modern life, including productivity hack culture, corporate greed, the pressure to optimise ourselves, and the isolation that persists even in a hyper-connected social media world.

My only real criticism is that I wish it were a longer version of this story, given the number of ideas explored; however, the novella length does keep the pacing tight. It is a short read I genuinely could not put down, but the ideas are rich enough that I would have loved to see them explored in even more depth. Even so, the book’s momentum and immersive atmosphere make it a gripping experience from beginning to end.

Overall, Abyss is another compelling entry in Nicholas Binge’s catalogue, smart, timely, and quietly disturbing in the best way.
Profile Image for Megan Magee.
927 reviews5 followers
November 2, 2025
This one blends a lot of genres into a short book- there’s science fiction, a tormented and bored MMC, a mamas boy mentality, and a new job on the horizon. When Joe finds himself working in a regular office setting, he immediately discovers he bit off more than he can chew and I’ll leave it there to avoid spoilers. This is one I’d never read in the dark again- some of the moments in it were viscerally terrifying. I enjoyed the plot, premise, and how the quickly the plot moved- my only complaint was I’d have liked a touch more description for the “why” of it all. Thanks so much to the author and Tor Nightfire for the chance to read and review this EARC!
Profile Image for Lexi Denee.
336 reviews
November 16, 2025
Y’all already know how much I love a creepy little novella. Abyss delivered SO MUCH in under 200 pages and it hit incredibly hard while it did so.

This story centers around corporate greed with a focus on losing individuality to efficiency, and how being human just…. Isn’t enough anymore. With automation looming in so many industries I think this is an incredible read for the current times, and it had me saying “YUPP!!!” at so many points.

On top of all the “real” talk in this book it is also a bat$hit crazy ride of cosmic/Lovecraftian horror. I love an absurd look at current times, and the social satire elements in this one reminded me of a cross between Vonnegut/Palahniuk (two of my favorites!!)

Here is my favorite quote that had me hollering:

“Life can be more efficient and convenient for you, if you want. All you have to do is sacrifice everything.”

Alright, that’s the end of my rave but please check this one out if you hate corporate greed, love corporate horror, social satire, and sometimes question everything while you are running in the rat race of survival!

**Thank you to Tor Nightfire for the eARC of this title, you guys have so many bangers coming out!!**
Profile Image for Laura.
53 reviews
December 3, 2025
Abyss is a compact read, one you can easily finish in a single sitting, but it packs in a surprising amount of atmosphere for its length. I found the first half especially compelling. It’s vague and eerie in all the right ways, the kind of unsettling slow burn that pulls you in and makes you eager to figure out what exactly is happening beneath the surface.

The second half, though, veers into territory that was a bit more bizarre than I was expecting. While I more or less understood what the ending was aiming for, I also walked away feeling like I didn’t entirely “get” it at the same time. There were a few intriguing threads woven through the story that I would have loved more explanation or closure on.

Still, the writing itself is strong, and the pacing kept me interested throughout. Even with my mixed feelings about the later twists, this was a quick, engaging read.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for an early copy in exchange for an honest review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Cindy C..
137 reviews
November 10, 2025
Nicholas Binge's The Abyss is such an appropriate story for today! This is a compact, chilling novella that blends psychological horror with speculative fiction, offering a sharp critique of corporate culture and the alienation of modern life. Set in a sterile office tower in Canary Warf, the story follows Joe Rice, a low-level employee at the mysterious Ponos Corporation, who begins to unravel as his workplace, and his mind, descend into surreal chaos. Joe is a quiet, unambitious man who lands a job at Ponos, a company that promises to unlock his "potential." But the office is eerily empty, is manager is paranoid, and his only companion is WellBot, an AI wellness chatbot that monitors is emotions and behavior. As Joe tries to navigate the increasingly bizarre demands of his job, he begins to experience hallucinations, time distortions, and a creeping sense that something monstrous lurks beneath the surface of his reality. The novella critiques how technology used to enforce emotional transparency and productivity, turning wellness into a tool of control. Joe's decent into madness mirrors the loneliness and disconnection of modern life, especially with the ever-growing reliance on technology. This was a haunting, thought provoking read that will resonate with anyone who ever felt lost in the machinery of modern life! I loved every minute of it!

Thank you to NetGalley and Tor for the advance readers copy in exchange for an honest review. All thoughts are my own.
Profile Image for Jess Reads Horror.
279 reviews10 followers
February 9, 2026
Thank you NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group for the ARC.

Joe is an anxious young man who, like many, is struggling with staying in touch with people, socializing, and doomscrolling. He finds a new job and everything is bizarre from the start. Once he starts, he quickly realizes things are not as they seem, and it becomes a race to save himself, or be eaten by the machine.

This was a super quick read, packed with action, creepy vibes, and unreliability. It reminds me of creepypastas, SCP type stories, and the video game Control (mostly the setting). Part one and part two give very different energy. I flew through part one because the set up was just that good. Imagine going to work, which can be a nightmare already, but imagine this AI chatbot that won’t leave you alone, and the building wants you to stay forever? Work anxiety to the max.

Part two though felt a bit rushed. I would probably have liked some more insight into the history, the villains, and even Virgil. I also understand this is a novella so gotta keep it on the short and straightforward end. I quite liked the ending, even though it was kind of ambiguous. Did he do the right thing? I have no idea.

Would recommend to horror readers and to those who need to feel better about their corporate jobs, probably.
Profile Image for Hannah Grimm.
18 reviews1 follower
February 18, 2026
Thank you to Nicholas Binge and the publisher for the opportunity to read and review Abyss. This book was steeped in dread and themes of existentialism. I found the writing to be clear and the pacing of the story felt natural. I empathized with the viewpoint characters anxieties and struggles with life and I easily found myself rooting for him early on. The story was strange and wonderful and I genuinely enjoyed both the horror elements and the critiques of capitalism baked in. This is one of those books that feels like pressing a reset button for your brain and really puts the value of life into perspective.
Profile Image for Vinay Badri.
833 reviews41 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 30, 2026
Severance meets The Matrix meets Get Out in this unsettling Lovecraftian novella with many a searing point to make on late-stage capitalism

Nicholas Binge has quickly become my go-to fix for when I need some Michael Crichton in my life. Between Ascension and Extremity (one of my books of 2025), Binge’s books have become must-reads and I am thankful to Tor for my advance review copy of Abyss, a novella that is eerily unsettling while touching down on some of the anxious themes of our times and taking down on some of the productivity maxims of capitalism.

“If he keeps his earphones in, they tend to keep conversations to themselves, which is a nice universal signal. He’s thankful that the world has adapted to provide this kind of convenience. It’s easier. It’s more productive, to be honest, because people can just get on”

Abyss finds Joseph Rice, a nervous, anxious doomscroller, on the eve of joining Ponos as an administrative assistant. Joe represents the current anxieties in a nutshell – eschewing any real form of interaction for a life surrounded by digital media while tumbling down rabbit holes to avoid doing anything real, tasks, or relationships. The opportunity at Ponos seems tailor-made for him, a job that doesn’t necessarily require him to interact with anyone else. However, there are disturbing things at play at Ponos, not least a Wellness bot installed on his terminal and, without permission, on his phone that keeps track of everything that Joe does. The creepiness only further escalates, and Joe finds himself getting increasingly lost to the outside world, just immersed in the demands of the work while becoming aware of the several irregularities occurring around him in the office. The resultant story dives down some crazy rabbit holes, even as century-long hidden conspiracies start to come to life around Joe.

“Labor productivity and living standards have never been a one-to-one correlation”

The tone of the book is what gets to you immediately as you start. Joe’s anxiety and nervousness are a direct result of the writing, and you almost immediately get that neurotic feel of the book. The unsettling vibes of the book get rather deep once Joe steps into the largely empty office, and, paradoxically, they get worse when he encounters the few people at work. The presence of the bot that attaches itself to his workstation and phone amps up the paranoia, making every action feel deliberately disorienting in many ways. This makes it a truly claustrophobic read, and as a reader, you feel the heart-pounding tenseness that Joe undergoes with him in a truly immersive manner.

“That’s the promise of the beast. The promise of the modern age. Life can be more efficient and convenient for you, if you want. All you have to do is sacrifice everything”

Keeping aside the horror elements, Abyss deals with potential, purpose, and productivity in many ways through the actions, observations, and interactions of Joe. The broader point that the author tries to embed within the story is about how much we as humans loathe inconvenience and friction, the lengths we go to avoid it, and the costs we incur due to such avoidance – the digital life that we lead, eschewing human interaction, blinds us to consequences that keep adding up. AI is just going to build upon these, and the author builds up this narrative, couching it in horror elements, to illuminate this particular theme. It is also a not-so-thinly veiled critique of capitalism on how humans feel the need to be productive at all times for their sense of self-worth and broader society acceptance.

“You’re a collapsed collection of potential, coexisting in a single body”

As a result of the disorientations and the simmering claustrophobia, the book moves along fairly quickly, which is a bit of a disadvantage given that this is a novella. Abyss is a book that definitely needs 30-40 more pages for events to sink in and for Joe to breathe and live in the madness – instead, we get to see actions and events happen so quickly that there isn’t much time for us to react and experience the shock and reaction that Joe goes through. I rarely say that a book needs more pages, but this fits into that criterion.

“Maybe progress isn’t all it’s cracked up to be”

Abyss continues Binge’s stellar run and is a worthy follow-up to Extremity as it takes its shots at society and capitalism. The unsettling and disorienting nature of Abyss doesn’t lend itself to the tenseness and thrill of Extremity. Abyss, however, does a fantastic job of staying uniformly creepy and claustrophobic, drawing its inspiration from a wide variety of sources while remaining trippy as heck


**************************************************
Fiercely unsettling & disorienting, Nicholas Binge's Abyss is Severance meets Matrix meets Get Out with healthy doses of Lovecraftian Horror in a searing indictment of late-stage capitalism and our thinly veiled obsession with productivity. I do however wish the book were longer as it just rushes by without giving us time to reflect

Full RTC
Profile Image for Jade Ford.
Author 2 books33 followers
March 20, 2026
I absolutely adored this read, and devoured it in two days!

This book took me in two different reader directions:

1. Creepy-thriller

Binge was great at developing atmosphere, and delivering a slow gradual increase of general creepy vibes. The horror parts perhaps didn't really hit me as hard - as a scientist I can become a bit obsessed with whether something is actually physically possible - but I love that the author pulled me up on that thought and was in the next instance, making me question just what was going on. I felt so engaged with the story during the whole read, and really related to the MC. I felt that the representation of anxiety was spot on, and by the end of the novel, I was all set to call my own parents and make sure they weren't feeling isolated (they weren't but we had a nice chat xD ).

2. Thought-provoking critisim of modern day corporate culture & social isolation due to media obsession.

Whether I read too much into it, and was taking away things that weren't there, didn't really matter to me. The fact that it provoked thoughts, and had me questioning things made it for an incredibly compelling read! At times I was sat there questioning whether yes, maybe I do too much doom-scrolling late at night, yes - perhaps I should be more sociable at times and less work obsessed. I LOVED this! Give me a book that makes me question my own life and be introspective and that'll make for the perfect horror read in my humble opinion! What's more terrifying than self reflection?

Either way, both aspects ABSOLUTELY DELIVERED and this was an easy 5 star read for me! I'll be checking to see if Binge has written anything else. A perfect short, engaging novella that can really make you think or just be treated as a quick, fun thrilling read. Thank you for the advanced reader's copy!
204 reviews2 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 18, 2026
Joe Rice’s life is already a kind of void, lonely, disconnected, terminally online, so when he lands a new admin job at the Ponos corporation, he expects boredom, not revelation. But from day one, the place is wrong: a massive Canary Wharf office that is eerily empty, a manager vibrating with paranoia, and an “AI wellness” chatbot called WellBot that monitors him with the cheery menace of a mandated smile.

What I loved most is how Binge weaponizes Joe’s emptiness. Joe is not a plucky hero or a chosen one. He is a man who has optimized his life for minimal human contact and does not even realize what it has cost him until the office forces him to look straight at it. The horror does not arrive with a jump scare. It seeps in through policy language, automated “care,” and the kind of surveillance that insists it is doing you a favor. The book leans into that claustrophobic isolation, being watched, being measured, and slowly unraveling as reality starts to warp around you.

And yes, the themes can be heavy handed. But honestly, it earns the bluntness. Abyss is an ugly, deliciously bitter parable about late stage capitalism, about how the rich will hollow out everyone else to keep their comfort plush and their profits compounding. It feels like an Ayn Rand fever dream rewritten by someone who actually noticed the bodies under the bridge. The story does not just say “wage slave.” It makes you feel the chain around the ankle and the corporate voice asking if you are “thriving” while it tightens.

If you like your horror surreal, systemic, and uncomfortably familiar, with Severance vibes and a creeping Lovecraftian undertow, this one will eat you alive in the best way.
Profile Image for Hannah.
623 reviews22 followers
November 24, 2025
Thank you to Tor Publishing Group for providing a copy of this book for review consideration via NetGalley. All opinions expressed here are my own.

Nicholas Binge has become one of my go-to authors for sci-fi that’s both emotionally layered and formally inventive — stories that take big swings with structure while still delivering heart. So I went into Abyss expecting his signature blend of ambition and intensity. Instead, what I got felt like the made-for-TV version of a Nicholas Binge story.

The setup has promise: Joe, an aimless new hire at a mysterious company, finds himself swallowed by an office that’s far weirder — and far more sinister — than anything he read in the employment contract. There’s corporate horror, surreal twists, and the creeping sense that capitalism might literally be eating us alive.

But unlike Ascension or Dissolution, which married high-concept ideas with surprising emotional depth, Abyss never quite pushes beyond the expected beats of a “weird office” story. The themes — exploitation, identity, alienation — are resonant but well-trodden by now, and the plot unfolds with a predictability that kept me at arm’s length.

All told, Abyss is a fine slice of corporate horror — quick, moody, clever — but it didn’t leave much of an impression on me. I’ll happily keep reading Nicholas Binge, because I know what he’s capable of. This novella just wasn’t one of the ones that best showcases his talent.
Profile Image for Siobhan.
Author 3 books121 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 8, 2026
Abyss is a novella about the horror of endless productivity, as a man finds himself trapped in his new workplace. Joe feels disconnected from everyone and needs a job, but when he's finally hired for an admin role, his new office isn't as expected. It is strangely empty and he's monitored by WellBot, the company's AI chatbot that is always asking how he is. And Joe's line manager has unauthorised tasks for him to complete...

This novella takes a simple concept—the productivity hell of many modern workplaces—-and turns it into an existential horror about being trapped for someone else's gain. It is hard not to compare it to the TV series Severance in terms of the workplace vibes, though the story itself is far more simple. The first part of the book builds up the dread, with some well-developed frustration as things don't work out for Joe as expected, and then the second half quickly turns into something more surreal and dangerous. Due to the short length, the second half doesn't get much space for its ideas, and for me personally I wish it had that bit more space for them.

Abyss reminded me of Nino Cipri's novella Finna in its use of the novella form to tell a horror story about the modern workplace, and it is ideal if you like fast-paced horror based on a central concept. I found it a bit too similar to other things without saying anything new, but it is still a solid story that you can easily get through in one sitting.
Profile Image for Jazmyn Hartman.
48 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 10, 2026
Joe, post COVID has fully isolated himself in his flat. He doesn't talk to his friends, doesn't really respond to his mom's texts or calls. He gets everything delivered to his house. He just mindlessly scrolls on Reddit and Instagram, overthinking anything and everything. Not only has he let his anxiety get the better of him, he's lost his work from home job. He finally gets a response to one of his applications, but it's a company he's never heard of before. Regardless, he needs to pay rent, so he shows up. But things are weird, not only is the AI chat bot extremely off-putting and intense, but there's hardly anyone in the building. He feels almost as isolated here as at home. When he is set a task that's not "AI chat bot" approved, everything starts to spiral. And maybe he'll never get out?

What a fun, wild ride of a book. This was my first venture into corporate horror, and I loved it. It definitely gave me "backrooms" vibes. The social commentary hit SO close to home it was almost hard to read. I kept thinking, "Work to live. Live to work." The sad truth of many a persons life. We only matter if we are productive. Aside from that, the eldritch horror was a great spooky element to tie in what's really going on (no spoilers). A genuinely enjoyable, spooky, and surprisingly thought provoking little novella!
Profile Image for Holly Gonzalez.
406 reviews24 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
February 12, 2026
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for providing me with an e-copy in exchange for an honest review.

Abyss is the kind of read that creeps up on you quietly, a compact descent you can finish in one sitting, yet it lingers like a shadow just beyond your peripheral vision. The first half pulled me under with its haunting atmosphere. It’s vague, eerie, and unsettling in the best way, a slow burning dread that coils tighter with every page and makes you desperate to uncover what’s lurking beneath it all.

But somewhere in the darkness, the story takes a stranger turn than I anticipated. While I can sense what the ending was reaching for, I closed the book feeling more disoriented than enlightened. It felt like waking from a nightmare you can’t quite piece together. Several intriguing threads drift through the narrative, and I found myself wishing for a bit more clarity… or at least a lantern to guide me toward some closure.

Even so, the writing is undeniably strong, and the pacing kept me wandering deeper when I probably should’ve turned back. Despite my confusion over the final twists, Abyss remains a quick, chilling read that horror lovers may still enjoy, just be prepared to sit with the strange echoes it leaves behind.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Arthur Howell.
311 reviews6 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 3, 2026
Many thanks to NetGalley and Tor Nightfire for providing me with an eARC of Abyss in exchange for my honest review!

While this does land as my least-favorite book from Nicholas Binge, that doesn't stop it from being an engagingly atmospheric piece of liminal horror. It plunges me into the dread of this strange workplace that feels like it wants to suck all the life out of my heart as I spend more and more time being trapped inside of it. It becomes a vehicle for firing off sharp criticisms at capitalism and AI, both of which are doing too effective of a job at swarming throughout our world and digging their claws into us humans. However, this book invests a ton of energy into its mood and its themes while leaving me having somewhat of a hard time connecting with the characters. I want to latch onto the story more deeply like I had with Dissolution and Extremity, but the substance isn't fleshed out enough. At least this novella knows how to keep the pace running quickly so that it avoids overstaying its welcome.

Overall, I'm officially rating Abyss 3.25 out of 5 stars, which I'm rounding down to 3 stars. I'll definitely keep checking out more of Binge's bibliography.
Profile Image for love..
46 reviews
Review of advance copy received from Edelweiss+
January 15, 2026
A decent addition to the "Work Is Hell" science fiction that has become zeitgeisty recently. The comparison to Severance is very apt: infinite hallways, loss of self in both literal and figurative senses, unknown "Work" and creepy bots. It reminded me too of Qntm's 2025 "There Is No Antimemetics Division" and SCP Foundation worldbuilding in general.

Definitely fun, with a novella-sized character arc that felt satisfying and some good, classic horror tropes. A bit or gore, a bit of existential dread, and a Lovecraftian space entity to top it off.

Around the 75% mark we get a rushed ending, full of explanations and unbelievable character speeches as the story (and its lore) hastily knits itself closed. It's commentary on capitalism and work culture was often too heavy handed in this latter half of the book for my tastes. I wonder if this was a longer novel, some of these problems would be more smoothly executed.

All in all, it was fun and I'll be watching for longer works from this author in the future. And putting his novel Ascension on my TBR!
32 reviews
January 5, 2026
This book had me hooked from chapter 1. Story about a man who was looking for work and trying to find work that does not require a lot of effort. This is a very interesting read as it identifies today’s world of wage salary and the corporate world and how you get sucked into it. As he continues to work for the company, strange things begin to happen. There are some areas within the book that seem to be missing details but the moral of the story is very unique. This is a fast and easy read and will keep you guessing throughout the book. I enjoyed the read as it was fast paced and kept you guessing. I write this a 3.5 star only because of the lack of detailing to specific areas within the book however, overall I did enjoy it.

This book publishes on May 2026 and I received it from Netgalley. Thank you Nicholas Binge and Netgalley for this great ARC.
Profile Image for Bonnie.
2,514 reviews126 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 8, 2026
A fun horror novella about the evils of the corporate grind that I read in one sitting. Joe is an average dude who spends too much of his life on the internet and has lost touch with real-life friends. He gets a new job that he hopes will at least cover the bills, but things seem off from the get-go when the office lobby is completely empty. The story ramps up immediately, as things at work only get stranger from there.

This is an anti-capitalist novella that is not subtle about the need to have a life outside of work and the internet. For instance, one of the ways to survive and not get absorbed into being a mindless work drone is to be with another human being. But the message doesn't get in the way of the thrills or the fun, so I didn't mind the heavy handedness.

Thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC!
Profile Image for Danielle.
64 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from NetGalley
March 30, 2026
I didn’t realize this was a novella at first when I recommended it, but I think it was exactly as long as it needed to be. I couldn’t have loved it more honestly. In a short story it commented on so much. It makes points about mental health and isolation, technology (and our over-reliance on it), and capitalism. I hated Joe at first but truly understood how much his character arc relied on the reader hating him at first. Although I loved the ending so much (I teared up multiple times throughout but especially at the end), I just want to know what happens to the others 😭! This is definitely a weird one, and won’t be for everyone, but anyone who likes Black Mirror would really like this one I think.
Profile Image for Emily Westerwick .
115 reviews5 followers
November 25, 2025
An anxious under-achiever takes an entry-level job at a company that he quickly finds to exist in a realm outside of reality that he struggles to escape. 

A bit heavy-handed allegory of corporate greed and AI depersonalization. Definitely delivers on the Severance-meets-Lovecraft promise. I had more fun with the world-building and exposition than I did with the action, but I tend to feel that way with most sci-fi/fantasy. The author did a good job making me feel the unease that the main character felt when first exploring Ponos. Overall, this story was well-suited for the novella length we were given. 

Big thanks to NetGalley and the author and the publisher for the ARC.
Profile Image for Christine.
54 reviews2 followers
November 30, 2025
ARC for review; to be published on 12 May 2026.

This book is short and can be read in one sitting. I really enjoyed the first half of the story. It was just vague and unsettling enough to pull me in and wonder what was going and then looking forward to finding out.

The second half became a bit more bizarre than I had wanted, I also felt like, while I “got” the ending, I also didn’t quite get it at the same time. There were some threads in the story that I would have liked more information on.

All in all, I would read more by this author. This was well-written and a quick, mostly interesting read.
Profile Image for Amber Adams.
205 reviews15 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
January 6, 2026
Joe, the MMC, is alone in this sterile environment that is his work. His only companion is an AI chatbot called WellBot, who monitors Joe's behaviors and emotions.

The book delves into Joe's spiral into insanity as he hallucinates, time starts distorting, and feelings of isolation and being watched. There were plenty of intense moments that felt terrifying. Imagine being stuck in a time loop, where nothing was as it seemed, you were forced to do things at work that were more than you could handle, and you were all alone.

Pacing was great, the emotions were real, and the descriptions were fantastic. Quite a punch for a short book!
Profile Image for melissareadshorror.
155 reviews8 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 8, 2026
Thanks to Tor Publishing Group and NetGalley for an e-ARC of Abyss in exchange for an honest review.

Rating: 5/5

⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

This book was amazing! I was hooked from start to finish. Though I could have easily read it in one sitting, I chose to savour each page. The story felt deeply relatable yet also existential, tinged with sadness. Anyone navigating today’s world, especially with the rise of AI and the realities of work, will likely find themselves as captivated as I was. I’ll definitely be seeking out more from this author.

Profile Image for Kera’s Always Reading.
2,096 reviews81 followers
November 6, 2025
This one really creeped me out. The loss of control and the coming in and out of coherence of the perilous situation these characters were in really affected me with this one… in the best way!

There isn’t much you can say without revealing spoilers, so just check it out. This is creepy existential horror with some great psychological horror and some gore thrown in. I definitely recommend this one.
Profile Image for Sandra Danielle.
150 reviews1 follower
February 23, 2026
This intense horror is impossible to shake. Joe thinks he’s finally getting out of his rut when he lands a job at a promising company. The deeper Joe gets into the job, the stranger things become, he starts seeing things, losing track of time, and the uneasy feeling that something dark is lurking just below the surface keeps growing. A spine-chilling look at how technology, masked as well-being, can slowly isolate and control us.
A definite must-read! 5 stars!!
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