Eminence Front is a chilling winter horror novella that leans heavily into atmosphere, dread, and the slow suffocation of inevitability. Set on a quiet suburban street in New England, the story unfolds as a winter storm descends—bringing with it something far older and far more dangerous than snowdrifts and power outages. This was my first experience reading Rebecca Rowland, and her writing immediately stood out. The opening of the novella does an excellent job establishing both setting and character. Rowland’s prose is clean, controlled, and evocative, grounding the reader firmly in the everyday lives of the residents before unsettling that normalcy piece by piece. The creeping sense that something is wrong —the whispers beneath the snow, the storm that seems to know each resident intimately—is handled with restraint and confidence, echoing the quiet unease found in classic suburban horror. Where Eminence Front truly shines is in its buildup. The tension escalate...