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Paradise

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A world on the brink of collapse. Dense woods, mountains, a standing stone, a barrow, and a very old house. But if you’ve only ever known concrete and glass, how do you live in a place like this?

Recruited by a mysterious organisation, Nash thinks things are finally going his way. But when a job goes badly wrong, he is taken to an isolated location to await a decision on his fate.

Paradise is a crumbling cottage deep in a forest; Nash is free to leave the house but must not leave the woods. It is winter, and this wild and remote place is unknowable and terrifying. He attempts to map his surroundings to find a way out, but they resist him, the land seemingly shifting and changing. Moreover, he begins to suspect that his employers’ intentions may be much darker than anticipated.

Forming an unlikely friendship, Nash finally begins to understand the consoling power of the place that has become his home. Brigid is sure of herself and at home in the natural world, while he is urban, lost. But she longs for his world, and he longs for hers.

Now the wheel of the year is turning. As winter gives way to spring Nash’s fate has been decided, and they are coming to deliver their verdict…

Paradise is the brilliant new novel from Ben Tufnell, an uncategorizable Kafkaesque eco-thriller combining elements of noir, folk horror and nature writing, addressing the most urgent of contemporary issues.

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First published March 1, 2026

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Ben Tufnell

22 books8 followers

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5 stars
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15 (44%)
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6 (17%)
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Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews
Profile Image for Sonja Charters.
2,973 reviews145 followers
April 27, 2026
Paradise is one of those books that I maybe wouldn't naturally gravitate to - however, the mix of genres here made this such a compelling and relevant read. 

 

I was initially drawn to this by the front cover and that dark and moody image contrasted with the title. Certainly not what most people would associate with paradise at all - in fact, this first gave me a forboding vibe and put me in edge before I'd even opened the book.

 

Nash gets mixed up with a mysterious organisation and when his job goes wrong, he's banished to a flaky cottage deep in the forest.

As someone not used to this amount of nature and the winter weather not on his side, Nash is obviously terrified.

Able to leave the cottage but not the forest, he starts to map the area - but there are definitely strange things going on out there.

 

This started off a little slower paced than I usually like, but I was so intrigued by the whole concept of this story that I couldn't help but be drawn forward through the pages.

 

I loved the mystery of the forest and needed to understand whether there were other elements at play here - this was dark and almost verging on folk horror at times and I loved it.

 

The relationship between Nash and Brigid was intriguing and shows just how nature makes people crave the thing they know the least. Both parties desperate to learn more about each others natural habitat.

 

The pace certainly picks up along with the tension and I inhaled the remainder of the book, almost not even blinking through the final section.

 

An atmospheric and immersive read that I'm so glad I picked up.

I'm looking forward to adding more books like this - and more from this author to my tbr soon.

 

 

 



 
Profile Image for Andy Weston.
3,311 reviews240 followers
April 21, 2026
The novel opens with the protagonist, Nash, being collected up by his direct bosses after a hit goes wrong at a hotel. He is blindfolded and driven to an isolated and rundown cottage in the area of Paradise, far away from the city. Under duress, he is told to wait while the operation and is evaluated. They will return to deliver the outcome. Meanwhile he waits, alone, with the sole exception of a teenage girl, a neighbour, who pays him occasional visits.

It’s a steady build up, with elements of the surreal, but hardly Kafkaesque as some reviewers have branded it. It’s a plot-driven novel, even a thriller I guess, but not a lot happens for the large part of it, until there is a climax that is really strong, and the reader’s patience is rewarded.
Profile Image for Abbie ✨ .
111 reviews4 followers
April 23, 2026
3.5 / 5 🌟

I’m not really sure where to start with this one!

It’s definitely a slow burner, I had no idea what was going on in probably the first half of the book, but I guess that was the point.

Nash as a character was very layered. He had a traumatic past, which made him very guarded and not able to let a lot of people in. But when he did, like with Mary Owen and Brigid, he was kind, caring, and just needed a friend.

I wish the ending wasn’t as predictable (although I didn’t expect THOSE scenes to happen the way they did!!!), but overall I really enjoyed it!

Thanks to the publisher for gifting me a proof copy and a finished copy!
Profile Image for Gumble's Yard - Golden Reviewer.
2,293 reviews1,838 followers
December 4, 2025
It is, in fact, time to usher in the post-Anthropocene!
'What does that mean?'
'A natural paradise. There are some optimists - deluded people - who believe it may be possible for Homo sapiens to somehow reach a more enlightened state of being, to finally work towards achieving some kind of balance with nature and to live on in harmony with the planet. But the people we work with believe such a thing is simply impossible.  No, Homo sapiens is a mistake, a category error. The only way forward is to take it out of the equation. Let the garden recover. Let it flourish'

 
The writer and art-curator’s debut “North Shore” (2023) was about liminality and metamorphosis which itself spreads across the boundaries between fact, fiction, and outright fantasy and which transforms from what is initially a gothic style mystery to musings in art – an excellent book made even more special for me by its evocative setting in a not-quite Norfolk.
 
This his second novel opens in Winter with the close third party protagonist Nash being picked up by his handlers after a botched operation at a hotel and taken some way away from the City in which he operates (I assume London) to Paradise, a dilapidated cottage deep in a dark, gloomy wood set in a remote hillside in what he later finds out are the Welsh borders – and instructed to wait there (with heavy threats as to what will happen if he strays further than the woods) while the operation and his role in its failure is evaluated.
 
Flashback sections fill in Nash’s journey – deciding against a Maths degree at University (a terrible decision I have to say) he instead drifts into a series of casual, manual labour jobs before an incident in a pub (where he instinctively and calmly fights off an unprovoked attack from a local nutjob) draws his attention to the organisation who ask him to work – cash in hand and with accomodation provided.
 
At first Nash thinks his luck has changed – even if the work seems mysterious: picking up items, passing on messages, ferrying people around – and his superiors menacing.  But over time the work becomes darker – threats, physical violence, references to past jobs disposing of bodies – and his insistence on understanding more about the organisation makes him realise that what he had thought was possible a branch of the intelligence agencies seems instead related to an organisation seeming to want to usher in (both for profit and philosophical motives) the end of the Western Democracy/Capitalist era and even the end of the Anthropocene era.
 
Meanwhile in the woods he is supplied by a local lady in the employ of the organisation – horseriding Mary Owen – but then forms a secret friendship with her daughter Brigid: Brigid approaching college age and fascinated with his tales of the City at the same time as he finds himself increasingly drawn for the first time to the natural world in which Bridgid has always lived.
 
And all of this plays out against what he knows will be the inevitable reckoning from the organisation – a verdict against him that the longer time goes on he becomes convinced will be negative and brutally rendered.
 
Hugely atmospheric – this is an impressive part-Kafkaesque, part-Gothic literary eco-noir thriller, which manages to combine an immersive reading experience with an oblique exploration of late capitalism and climate change.
 
Recommended.
Profile Image for Amie Derricott.
164 reviews4 followers
April 20, 2026
We’re introduced to Nash as he walks away from a job gone wrong, clearly tied to a mysterious - and likely illegal - organisation, hinted at when he disposes of a gun in a canal. He knows someone is coming for him, and when he returns to his flat, two men arrive and take him away. With a bag over his head, he’s driven to an unknown location and left deep in the forest beside a crumbling cabin - “Paradise.” He’s free to roam the surrounding woods, but he cannot leave them, relying on Owen to bring supplies.
At first, Nash is understandably impatient, frustrated by how long he’ll be forced to stay while his supposed “crime” is investigated.

When Owen appears, we learn she is in fact a woman with a teenage daughter, Brigid. Nash is told he must not speak to anyone except Owen and must remain within the forest. However, as time passes, he slowly begins to adapt to his new environment. With Brigid’s help - despite the rules - they form a tentative friendship, and she introduces him to the forest, showing him hidden spots and teaching him how to navigate it.
As the days stretch on, Nash begins to feel a little lost, perhaps, forgotten. Owen tells him he has already been there longer than anyone else before him. Though he initially believes he will be cleared of wrongdoing, doubt gradually begins to creep in.

The story is told through a dual timeline, alternating between Nash’s life in Paradise and the events leading up to his arrival there.
I went into this expecting a horror, but it isn’t - at least not in the traditional sense. I’m not entirely sure what genre it falls into, but whatever it is, it works and I liked it!
It’s a slow burn in every sense, yet deeply atmospheric. The forest, its creatures, and Nash’s growing disorientation create a lingering sense of unease, as he struggles to understand where he stands - or if anyone is ever coming for him.
Profile Image for Jamad .
1,206 reviews26 followers
April 29, 2026
Paradise by Ben Tufnell is an unusual, slightly slippery novel that blends eco-thriller, folk horror and something more quietly reflective. It follows Nash, who, after a job goes wrong, is sent to an isolated woodland “paradise” to await judgment from a shadowy organisation. What unfolds is part mystery, part survival story, and part meditation on our relationship with the natural world.

I enjoyed this more than I expected. The setting does a lot of the heavy lifting — the forest feels alive, disorientating and faintly menacing, with the sense that the landscape itself is shifting under Nash’s feet. The writing leans into that strangeness, and while it can be a little opaque at times, it suits the mood.

There’s something distinctly Franz Kafka-esque in the set-up: the sense of being judged by an unseen authority, the lack of clear rules, and the quiet, persistent unease that hangs over everything. It gives the novel an added layer of tension, even when very little is actually happening on the surface.
Profile Image for Fatguyreading.
948 reviews44 followers
April 17, 2026
Paradise is a dark, foreboding, immersive read, set in deep mountainous woods in which we meet Nash, recruited by a shady organisation and after a job goes wrong, he finds himself in a dilapidated cottage, which he can leave, but he must remain withing the confines of the dense woods.
But it's winter, his surroundings are quite ominous, so Nash tries mapping the area, but to no avail as the land seems to be morphing and changing. But it's not long before he meets Brigid and their two worlds collide.

Want to know more? Be sure to pick your copy up to find out.

So all in all, this was quite the mysterious read, full of deep atmosphere and a storyline line that at first moves more on the slower side, but soon picks up.

4 🌟 🌟 🌟 🌟 's from me.
1 review
April 30, 2026
Paradise isn’t the kind of book I’d usually pick up, but it completely drew me in. What starts as a gentle, slightly unsettling story soon builds into something far more gripping. Nash’s isolation in the forest is vividly described, and there’s a constant sense that something isn’t quite right. The atmosphere is dark and tense, with moments that almost feel like folk horror. Soon the pace picks up and I couldn't put it down. I read it in 2 days which is unheard of for me. The writing is rich and immersive, especially in its depiction of nature. Overall, it’s a compelling, slightly eerie read that stays with you after you finish it. I keep thinking about it and I really hope the author does a sequel. It would make a lovely film.
Profile Image for Sarah.
8 reviews2 followers
Review of advance copy received from Publisher
February 26, 2026
Paradise had a bit of a slow start, but once you got into the story it was super easy to read (I read cover to cover in about 3.5 hours).

This felt like a dark TV drama that I just couldn't get enough of once I was in it.

What's not to love? A company that is shady about what it does, all identities are hidden and there's some woodsy escape 😂

Air BnB would have a wild time with that review.

There were a few places that I really didn't understand what was going on, but ultimately I was fine with it and going with the flow of how this book doesn't really give a lot of affirmative answers.
1 review
March 13, 2026
Great for a book club read. Lots of discussion points. Wonderful descriptive passages. Gripping and transportive. Sequel please.
Displaying 1 - 11 of 11 reviews