Perfect for fans of The 7½ Deaths of Evelyn Hardcastle, with a modern gothic twist.
High in the Rocky Mountains on a secluded campus, sits Hildegard College, a celebrated institution known for its scientific innovation and its sprawling, botanical gardens. Historian Robin Quain has been awarded a residency to examine Hildegard’s impressive collection of ancient manuscripts, but she has a secret. She’s actually on the hunt for an artifactone she must find before her former best friend turned professional rival gets his hands on it first.
But Hildegard has secrets of its own. Strange sounds echo across the alpine lake, lights flicker through the pines, and the faculty seem more like Jazz-age glitterati than academics. And then there’s the professor who holds the key to Robin’s research. She vanished suddenly last spring. What exactly did she do at the college, and why does no one want to talk about her?
As Robin searches for answers, an unknown source sends her a series of cryptic messages that makes her question whether she’s the one doing the hunting, or whether someone is hunting her. Drawing on historical, botanical, and occult research, and steeped in the gothic tradition, Atlas of Unknowable Things considers what it means to search for meaning in the scientific, only to come face to face with the sublime.
Genre: Horror
High in the Rocky Mountains on a secluded campus, sits Hildegard College, a celebrated institution known for its scientific innovation and its sprawling, botanical gardens. Historian Robin Quain has been awarded a residency to examine Hildegard’s impressive collection of ancient manuscripts, but she has a secret. She’s actually on the hunt for an artifactone she must find before her former best friend turned professional rival gets his hands on it first.
But Hildegard has secrets of its own. Strange sounds echo across the alpine lake, lights flicker through the pines, and the faculty seem more like Jazz-age glitterati than academics. And then there’s the professor who holds the key to Robin’s research. She vanished suddenly last spring. What exactly did she do at the college, and why does no one want to talk about her?
As Robin searches for answers, an unknown source sends her a series of cryptic messages that makes her question whether she’s the one doing the hunting, or whether someone is hunting her. Drawing on historical, botanical, and occult research, and steeped in the gothic tradition, Atlas of Unknowable Things considers what it means to search for meaning in the scientific, only to come face to face with the sublime.
Genre: Horror
Praise for this book
"A dazzling novel of illusion, clever and eerie, whipsmart in its execution. I devoured this puzzle-box of a novel and will read whatever McCormick Templeman writes next." - Brittany Cavallaro
"Atlas of Unknowable Things is one of those rare novels with the power to adjust your grip on reality. Reading it feels like being in an escape room with a (not-racist) Lovecraft while sipping cocktails made of rare and marvelous herbs." - Camille DeAngelis
"Atlas of Unknowable Things is suspenseful, smart, and spooky. Templeman combines a vivid style that you'll want to take the time to savor with a such tight, twisty narrative that you'll end up racing through the pages anyway. This is one you'll want to read more than once!" - C J Dotson
"Atlas of Unknowable Things sent me down a dark, twisting rabbit hole while the author secretly reoriented my brain chemistry to only desire more of this book. When I wasn't reading it, I was thinking about it-Wildly addictive, terrifying, and smart as hell." - Sadie Hartmann
"Smart, twisty, and delightfully creepy." - Jay Kristoff
"Atlas of Unknowable Things is one of those rare novels with the power to adjust your grip on reality. Reading it feels like being in an escape room with a (not-racist) Lovecraft while sipping cocktails made of rare and marvelous herbs." - Camille DeAngelis
"Atlas of Unknowable Things is suspenseful, smart, and spooky. Templeman combines a vivid style that you'll want to take the time to savor with a such tight, twisty narrative that you'll end up racing through the pages anyway. This is one you'll want to read more than once!" - C J Dotson
"Atlas of Unknowable Things sent me down a dark, twisting rabbit hole while the author secretly reoriented my brain chemistry to only desire more of this book. When I wasn't reading it, I was thinking about it-Wildly addictive, terrifying, and smart as hell." - Sadie Hartmann
"Smart, twisty, and delightfully creepy." - Jay Kristoff
Visitors also looked at these books
Used availability for McCormick Templeman's Atlas of Unknowable Things