Children of the Fog
A Supernatural Horror Novel
by C.W. Anderson
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Pub Date Mar 05 2024 | Archive Date May 15 2025
Description
"I'm afraid. I'm afraid She might be back."
In the fog-drenched hills of San Francisco, siblings Lizzy and Dylan were once inseparable. It was the only way they could survive a childhood of horror and evil…until one final bloodstained night left them near-dead orphans.
Now in their twenties, each has taken a wildly different path through life: Lizzy is ambitious and polished, compulsively driven to escape her haunted past and the forbidden truth that still whispers in her soul, while her younger brother Dylan hitch-hikes across the country, homeless and half-insane, obsessed with a return of that dark realm and the sinister presence that hungered for them.
But something ominous is happening in the City by the Bay. Whispers of a strange fog that floods the streets at night, of beckoning shadows and dreams of a crumbling manor aloft over the city. As Dylan had feared, the Dark Lady has returned at last, and soon there will be nowhere for brother or sister to hide.
"Although you may be done with Her, I'm not so sure She's done with you."
A Note From the Publisher
Available Editions
EDITION | Paperback |
ISBN | 9781963733013 |
PRICE | $14.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 355 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews
Children of the Fog
Is a eerie tale of childhood monsters that don't quite leave you, even when you grow up. Though it does have a slow start, it does pick up after the first chapter and is very immersive on some realities. Anderson did not disappoint, enhancing the unsettling element of the fog, and the personification of the main characters nightmares.
I received an e-ARC copy of this book from the publishers on Netgalley in exchange for an honest review.
This is a novel about a brother and sister who faced something horrifying as children. They each went a different route dealing with this trauma. And now, as adults, they realize it's back and they have been marked.
Taking place in San Francisco and having horrific things coming from the thick fog is a great premise. And there are some truly unsettling things that happen.
Keep in mind that I think this author writes very well and there are some solid scares in the pages. In fact, I KNOW people who would absolutely love this book. But for me, personally, I was taken out of the story due to (for me) excessive descriptions and details which bogged down the narrative.
And that's really a shame because if those were a little tighter this would have been a much better read for me. But, there are still lots to like and I would recommend it to those who love details more than I do.
This does start out a little slow but then it picks up around chapter 2. It's an eerie, creepy story about a brother and sister who went through something horrifying as children. Now that they're adults, they realize their childhood night isn't over. This horror did not disappoint and I'm excited to see what else Anderson comes up with.
I really liked the idea behind this one, a brother and sister dealing with childhood trauma that turns out to be something sinister and supernatural and evil.
The idea itself is chilling.
However, I really struggled to get through this one. There are pages and pages and pages of inner monologue and description, bounding between the two characters. It needed a bit more movement and dialogue to pull me in and to set a pace for the story. It felt bigger down to me.
But, if you like more description and don't want a ton of dialogue, this might be more your speed. So, give it a try.
Lizzy and Dylan escape a childhood horror now it's back. Good characters love how the author shows same trauma effects them differently. Plenty of chill and thrills along the way. Slow start but soon picks up. Thanks to Fever Dream books and Netgalley for this review ARC.
Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for this ARC!
I got a definite vibe from this book that was somewhat similar to 'Skinamarink'. I feel like there was a lot of content in here that, when provided to the right person, would bring definite scares and substance, but sadly, I struggled to connect with this book. We follow a brother and sister who return to visit their old trauma, and find that it may not have just been shadows in the dark but a real, actual threat.
I feel like this book danced on the edge of good a lot of the time. There was a great deal of material here that was definitely on the edge of scary, but it got bogged down in exposition and drama between the siblings that just felt really hard to get through. I found that the end of the story as well wasn't quite what I had hoped for, and there's no real resolution from the side of the horror.
I still enjoyed the atmosphere that this book had, I just felt like it could have been better in other respects and tied more together than just the interpersonal side of it. If you are very much into assessing the minutiae of character's lives and getting horror out of processing trauma without an analogy, I genuinely think that you will love this book. For the more hardcore horror fans, sadly, it just doesn't quite hit the mark.
The premise behind the book was a good one, but I fee like it could have been executed better. The idea of childhood trauma for the siblings that was actually a supernatural kind of evil was unique. It had chilling moments to the book. I did struggle to finish it at times, but overall it wasn't too bad. I think the description and inner monologue was well done, but a little too much. I think that it needs to be more balanced.
Thank you Net Galley ARC
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