Member Reviews

The Dark We Know is a gothic horror that follows Isa, just returned to town after her father's passing. She's got a plan to stay only long enough to collect her share of the inheritance, and return back to the life she's made away from Slater. However, the town and it's ongoing mysteries quickly pulls her back in and she's caught in the middle, the same way she was two years ago when she left.

This book took a couple of chapters for me to really understand who all the characters mentioned were, but once I got a hang on the who's and how's, it became easier to keep track of what was happening. Isa was part of a friend group growing up that has been severely fractured in the past few years, with other teens either missing, dead, or vilified by the town.

This is a book that dives into the history of this supernatural town, with both past and current stories interweaving in a way that leaves both the reader and the surviving characters trying to figure out what is going on, and how to possibly stop it from continuing. This is a well written story and a lot of thought has gone into it, and I especially enjoyed the 'interludes' that happen every few chapters, that give a different narrative perspective.

This is a book that takes the entire length of the story to come together - so if you're reading and confused about certain things, it's a good idea to keep going until the end.

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Am I supposed to find words after reading a book that carved lines down the back of skin, that whispered to the oozing walls of my heart, that shattered my brain into ten million fragments only to put them back together in an infinitely more beautiful configuration? Am I supposed to describe a masterpiece?

The Dark We Know is a book of pain, of the scars and inheritance of generational trauma, of abuse and hate and fear. It is a book of how those twisted realities can morph and gnaw into themselves until the horror becomes a tangible, wicked thing. But, in the face of that, because of that, it about the deep-seated, sometimes messy and gut wrenching love that exists alongside it. That is so, so necessary. This book is speculative, yes, but it is because of that it is undoubtably human.

I like to think of it as a mix of Borrasca and Oxen Free, with fucked up rocks, lyrical writing that feeds into the powerful undercurrent of emotion driving every decision, and characters that are trying their best in the face of unimaginable terrors. Its fucked up. It is absolutely horrifying and weird and completely, utterly entrancing. I cannot say enough good things about this book. I know I said it before, but it bears repeating: this is a masterpiece. I am in awe.

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I really enjoyed this book, but I do wish that there was some more background provided on the characters and the town. I also would like to request that there not be two different colors of font in the final production of the book because it made it harder to read.

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