Nomads Nest, 12 is a comment on the isolation of our fractured, mobile modern society. The population of the town consists solely of the ever-changing inhabitants of six apartments, above a truck stop just off the highway in rural Alberta.
It’s not the kind of place folks tend to stay for long. But the people in this novel-in-stories befriend and defriend, fall in love or fall out and sometimes even have imaginary friends, sibling romances or visits from dead relatives, all while they’re just passing through.
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NOMADS NEST, POPULATION: 12 (2025) This novel-in-stories portrays some of the fallout of today's disconnected, mobile lifestyle. The residents of six apartments above a truck stop in rural Alberta, Canada, live, love, fight and run in place with each other, all as they're just passing through. https://www.amazon.com/Nomads-Nest-Po...
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Nomads Nest, 12 feels like someone bottled up rural Alberta’s loneliness, shook it like a snow globe, and said, “Okay, now watch these people try to figure their lives out.”
Six apartments. A truck stop. Zero permanence. It’s giving: “I’m not staying, but I might emotionally unravel here anyway.”
This book is a whole mood—messy, tender, weirdly mesmerizing. You don’t live in this story; you pass through it, just like everyone else in the building.
Each character brings something unexpected: 💫 imaginary friends who know way too much 💫 ghostly relatives doing surprise pop-ins 💫 “we probably shouldn’t be doing this” sibling dynamics 💫 friendships that last three weeks and feel like three lifetimes
It’s quirky, quiet, and a little unsettling in that “I’ve been in a truck-stop bathroom at 3 A.M. and contemplated my life choices” kind of way.
The structure? Chef’s kiss for vibes, but the emotional punch comes and goes like a guest who forgot to pay rent. Still, the humanity is real, raw, and sometimes hilariously off-kilter.
Final vibe: A story that wanders in, steals your cigarette, tells you about the ghost in their room, then disappears before sunrise. And honestly? I kinda liked the chaos.
A glimpse into a single building town's life and the interpersonal relationships between all of the residents. The multiple POV did get a little bit confusing at a point as some new charaters are introduced later on. It was a fun, short read into the different lives, but I didn't take anything away from this novel.
I really liked this literary novel-in-stories, a glimpse into the lives of the characters coming and going at moments of transition in their lives. It reminded me a little of a modern day Lake Wobegon or The Women of Brewster Place, but with everybody being more mobile, reflecting how things often are these days. I especially liked how the story people kept showing up in each other’s story chapters, not to mention the migrating tulpa, the brother-sister romantic couple, the dead guy’s return and that whole accidental death and kind-hearted baby-snatching thing. And at the turn of the year, there’s a whole new crop of residents in these six apartments above a truck stop in rural Alberta, Canada. I’ll definitely be reading more from Carly Berg
Nomads Nest is a group of 6 apartments above a truck stop in nowhere Canada. Needless to say, those who live there aren't your ordinary, run of the mill people. As they come and go, the residents form quite the dysfunctional family.
An interesting read with vibrant characters and a quirky storyline. Great for anyone who has fantasized of living in a remote environment with just a few people. Would you thrive or just survive? #GoodreadsGiveaway
This is just all random stories that only have similarities in characters. Nothing makes sense and there's no plot. No purpose. The summary sounded good, but I think AI rendered that based on a sentence from each chapter.