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A Psychological Horror Novel of Ash, Memory, and the Monsters We Create
Six months after losing their six-year-old son in a wildfire, Miles and Cora Westbrook have buried themselves inside the only thing still standing between them and the end of the world: an isolated mountain estate designed to survive the apocalypse. Beyond the walls of Blackwood Heights, a toxic sea of ash known as The Cinder has swallowed the sky and transformed the outside world into a wasteland of poison and ruin. Inside, an enormous filtration system called The Lungs keeps them alive, sealing them away from the deadly air beyond the glass.
But grief has a way of finding cracks in even the strongest walls.
Cora begins hearing Owen in the playroom. At first, it is only small things: a shifted toy, a voice in the silence, a handprint appearing on a second-story window where no living child could possibly stand. Miles refuses to believe it. He tells himself the toxic atmosphere is affecting their minds. The Cinder has been linked to strange neurological effects, vivid sensory distortions, and hallucinations powerful enough to blur memory and reality. There has to be an explanation.
Until the house itself begins to change.
Voices whisper through the ventilation shafts. Footprints of ash appear in locked rooms. Something alive starts growing inside the filtration system beneath the house. And buried deep under Blackwood Heights lies a hidden truth connected to a forgotten experiment known only as Lazarus.
As the world outside closes in and reality inside begins to fracture, Miles and Cora are forced to confront a possibility more terrifying than madness itself: something within the Cinder has learned how to wear the shape of grief. And the thing waiting beneath their home has been feeding on their pain for a very long time.
Because some monsters hunt the living.
Others wait for the broken.
The Grief Eater is an atmospheric blend of psychological horror, post-apocalyptic suspense, survival terror, and dark science fiction-perfect for readers drawn to haunting family tragedies, creeping dread, and stories where the most dangerous ghosts are the ones we refuse to let go.
Six months after losing their six-year-old son in a wildfire, Miles and Cora Westbrook have buried themselves inside the only thing still standing between them and the end of the world: an isolated mountain estate designed to survive the apocalypse. Beyond the walls of Blackwood Heights, a toxic sea of ash known as The Cinder has swallowed the sky and transformed the outside world into a wasteland of poison and ruin. Inside, an enormous filtration system called The Lungs keeps them alive, sealing them away from the deadly air beyond the glass.
But grief has a way of finding cracks in even the strongest walls.
Cora begins hearing Owen in the playroom. At first, it is only small things: a shifted toy, a voice in the silence, a handprint appearing on a second-story window where no living child could possibly stand. Miles refuses to believe it. He tells himself the toxic atmosphere is affecting their minds. The Cinder has been linked to strange neurological effects, vivid sensory distortions, and hallucinations powerful enough to blur memory and reality. There has to be an explanation.
Until the house itself begins to change.
Voices whisper through the ventilation shafts. Footprints of ash appear in locked rooms. Something alive starts growing inside the filtration system beneath the house. And buried deep under Blackwood Heights lies a hidden truth connected to a forgotten experiment known only as Lazarus.
As the world outside closes in and reality inside begins to fracture, Miles and Cora are forced to confront a possibility more terrifying than madness itself: something within the Cinder has learned how to wear the shape of grief. And the thing waiting beneath their home has been feeding on their pain for a very long time.
Because some monsters hunt the living.
Others wait for the broken.
The Grief Eater is an atmospheric blend of psychological horror, post-apocalyptic suspense, survival terror, and dark science fiction-perfect for readers drawn to haunting family tragedies, creeping dread, and stories where the most dangerous ghosts are the ones we refuse to let go.