Wednesday, November 06, 2024

The Nested Man by Mark Steensland

 

(pb; 2024)

From the back cover

“Frank Hastane is an anthropology professor attempting to decode a notorious grimoire known as the Atrum Res. Frank’s uprooted this family and responsibilities at Rawlson University, an institution with a checkered past. Soon he begins to discover the terrifying truth about the grimoire, his supervisor at Rawlson, and his own identity and past connection with the book.”

 

Review

The tone and details of Steensland’s latest book, Nested, brings to mind the steady-build paranoia of a 1970s/80s conspiracy thriller crossed with a 1980s/90s supernatural mystery, with a suburban/collegiate cypher of a protagonist whose hazy past comes into nightmarish relief when he gets an enigmatic phone call from a mysterious woman. This ringing of Hastane leads him down a dark, possibly fatal path of self-discovery, one that threatens his family and the world as well.

Nested is an excellent read, one worth owning—it’s tight prose, attention to details (which usually matter in a larger way later in the book), and waste-no-words, steady-build pacing is one of the better conspiracy-fiction books I’ve read in a long while, given to us by the co-screenwriter of Jakob’s Wife (2021; director/co-screenwriter: Travis Stevens) and other worthwhile works.

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