When a metal band’s lead singer vanishes in the woods, the mushrooms in the forest might know more than they’re letting on in this mycelium-metal horror novel from Shirley Jackson Award-nominated author Jo Kaplan.
The dead collect in low places. That’s what Brynn Werner, lead singer of metal band Queen Carrion, wrote in her notebook before she vanished while staying at a cabin in Oregon’s Umpqua National Forest.
A year later, on the anniversary of her disappearance, the rest of her bandmates visit the cabin to remember her and find a way to move on. But tensions arise over who should be their new singer and who is responsible for Brynn’s disappearancetensions that boil over as they realize not all is as it seems at Trail Creek Cabin.
Strange entries in the guestbook write about visions of a pale form that moves through the trees, figures wearing gas masks lurk in the distance, and there’s a strange fungus growing from the wall of a tunnel in the cabin’s basement. Then they hear Brynn’s voice echo impossibly through the forestand the pale form that emerges from the trees is her perfect likeness. Is it her ghost or something else?
Brynn knew there was a secret in these woods. It’s why she chased her muse here to finish her masterpiece. The Midnight Muse is an alluring and grotesque dissection of self and fungus. Kaplan delivers an ominous spiral of psychological torment as the members of Queen Carrion slip into a more natural skin.
Genre: Horror
The dead collect in low places. That’s what Brynn Werner, lead singer of metal band Queen Carrion, wrote in her notebook before she vanished while staying at a cabin in Oregon’s Umpqua National Forest.
A year later, on the anniversary of her disappearance, the rest of her bandmates visit the cabin to remember her and find a way to move on. But tensions arise over who should be their new singer and who is responsible for Brynn’s disappearancetensions that boil over as they realize not all is as it seems at Trail Creek Cabin.
Strange entries in the guestbook write about visions of a pale form that moves through the trees, figures wearing gas masks lurk in the distance, and there’s a strange fungus growing from the wall of a tunnel in the cabin’s basement. Then they hear Brynn’s voice echo impossibly through the forestand the pale form that emerges from the trees is her perfect likeness. Is it her ghost or something else?
Brynn knew there was a secret in these woods. It’s why she chased her muse here to finish her masterpiece. The Midnight Muse is an alluring and grotesque dissection of self and fungus. Kaplan delivers an ominous spiral of psychological torment as the members of Queen Carrion slip into a more natural skin.
Genre: Horror
Praise for this book
"Fetid, cosmic, and distinctly human, The Midnight Muse is a corpsepaint-daubed reimagining of the urge to create art as an infection. It asks what happens when those compelled by its charge are consumed by its creeping compulsion. A must-read." - Zachary Ashford
"A pungent myco-psycho nightmare that will leave readers jonesing for Carrion Queen on ghost-white vinyl, The Midnight Muse pits inspiration against collaboration, individuality against uniformity, and want against need in a pagan-metal symphony of seductive survival horror." - Matthew R Davis
"One of the most effective and compelling marriages of natural and supernatural horror since Richard Matheson's Hell House, The Midnight Muse by Jo Kaplan is full of dazzling surprises and eerie plot twists that make it hard to stop turning pages. Kaplan's novel will connect with fans of recent works like Paul Tremblay's The Cabin at the End of the World or Cherie Priest's The Toll. At the same time, its meditations on the disturbingly porous veil dividing the living from the dead--and the human from the inhuman--may also put readers in mind of classic works of the uncanny like The Island of Doctor Moreau or even Fitz-James O'Brien's 'What Was It?' Though the terrors that beset her protagonists are deeply unnerving, Kaplan also manages to infuse The Midnight Muse with a rollicking sense of fun; you may grin or even giggle from time to time, even as the urge to hide under your blankets grows stronger and stronger. The Midnight Muse is thoroughly impressive horror storytelling, and an utter delight to read." - Scott Kenemore
"The Midnight Muse is a gorgeously written, tense, and complex cabin-in-the-woods story for music lovers and fans of body horror." - Christi Nogle
"A pungent myco-psycho nightmare that will leave readers jonesing for Carrion Queen on ghost-white vinyl, The Midnight Muse pits inspiration against collaboration, individuality against uniformity, and want against need in a pagan-metal symphony of seductive survival horror." - Matthew R Davis
"One of the most effective and compelling marriages of natural and supernatural horror since Richard Matheson's Hell House, The Midnight Muse by Jo Kaplan is full of dazzling surprises and eerie plot twists that make it hard to stop turning pages. Kaplan's novel will connect with fans of recent works like Paul Tremblay's The Cabin at the End of the World or Cherie Priest's The Toll. At the same time, its meditations on the disturbingly porous veil dividing the living from the dead--and the human from the inhuman--may also put readers in mind of classic works of the uncanny like The Island of Doctor Moreau or even Fitz-James O'Brien's 'What Was It?' Though the terrors that beset her protagonists are deeply unnerving, Kaplan also manages to infuse The Midnight Muse with a rollicking sense of fun; you may grin or even giggle from time to time, even as the urge to hide under your blankets grows stronger and stronger. The Midnight Muse is thoroughly impressive horror storytelling, and an utter delight to read." - Scott Kenemore
"The Midnight Muse is a gorgeously written, tense, and complex cabin-in-the-woods story for music lovers and fans of body horror." - Christi Nogle
Visitors also looked at these books
Used availability for Jo Kaplan's The Midnight Muse