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Showing posts from January, 2026

Night Terror (Bleak Haven #2) by Vincent Ralph

  Night Terror is the second installment in Vincent Ralph’s Bleak Haven series, though chronologically it takes place before Dead Fake . Set in 1987, the novel dives headfirst into the town’s dark past and offers readers a deeper look at the horrors that shaped Bleak Haven long before modern technology entered the picture. The story centers on 17-year-old Noah, a survivor of the town’s most devastating tragedy to date. He works at a bookstore in the local mall—until a robbery quickly turns into something far more sinister. The masked attackers aren’t after money; they’re searching for Bleak Haven’s infamous urban legend, The Burning Book . When something hungry and inhuman crawls from its pages, Noah must rely on his knowledge of the town’s grim history to keep himself and the other hostages alive and prevent Bleak Haven from descending into yet another massacre. Compared to Dead Fake , Night Terror leans much more heavily into traditional horror. Cursed objects, undead threa...

Dead Fake (Bleak Haven #1) by Vincent Ralph

  Dead Fake introduces readers to Bleak Haven—a town with secrets, shadows, and a disturbing relationship with technology. When a mysterious website allows students at Bleak Haven High to view AI-generated “deepfake” videos of their own deaths, it initially feels like just another morbid online trend. That illusion shatters when those fabricated deaths begin to play out in real life. The story follows Ava Wilson, who refuses to participate in the craze. As the niece of an infamous murderer, she already carries enough unwanted attention. But when her classmates’ deepfakes start becoming reality, Ava is forced into a deadly game where solving the mystery may be the only way to survive it. This was my first experience reading Vincent Ralph, and while the novel is written in first person—a point of view I don’t typically prefer—Ralph handles it well. Ava’s voice is clear and engaging, and the pacing keeps the tension high throughout. The premise is timely and unsettling, tapping i...