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Average rating3
“A hallucinatory nightmare of a novel that blends adventure, horror and historical fiction, and isn’t shy about violence or strangeness.”—New York Times
“If you love wilderness horror, This Wretched Valley is a must-read.”—Alma Katsu, author of The Hunger and The Fervor
Take only pictures. Leave only bones.
This trip is going to be Dylan’s big break. Her geologist friend Clay has discovered an untouched cliff face in the Kentucky wilderness, and she is going to be the first person to climb it. Together with Clay, his research assistant Sylvia, and Dylan’s boyfriend Luke, Dylan is going to document her achievement on Instagram and finally cement her place as the next rising star in rock climbing.
Seven months later, three bodies are discovered in the trees just off the highway. All are in various states of decay: one a stark, white skeleton; the second emptied of its organs; and the third a mutilated corpse with the tongue, eyes, ears, and fingers removed. But Dylan is still missing—and no trace of her, dead or alive, has been discovered.
Were the climbers murdered? Did they succumb to cannibalism? Or are their impossible bodies the work of an even more sinister force?
This dread-inducing debut builds to a bloodcurdling climax, and will leave you shocked by the final twist.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book started off with promise and then it just dragged on and on. By the end I was listening to it at 1.5 speed. At first you are on edge wanting to know what happens but then it's just the same bs happening over and over again that seems like filler before it got to the point. 2⭐️
Finished this in one sitting on account of it being brisk to read through, and having a consistently tense pace. Predictable—especially given the artistic choice to have a cold open essentially telling us the fates of the main cast—but still entertaining to read. It's a strong debut horror book, and one that will surely keep my eyes at attention for Kiefer's next book. My only primarily point of critique, would be that the characters could have been fleshed out better and made to be a bit more relatable: I didn't connect to any of the characters, and found one of them to have quite the drastic and unearned shift.
I strongly recommend this to fans of Briardark, The Ruins, and maybe even a little bit of the Wrong Turn remake.