
The Truth
Book
Perfect wife. Perfect life. Perfect crime. Anthony is not the man everyone believes him to be. And...
Suspense Psychological thriller

A Ladder To The Sky
Book
A psychological drama of cat and mouse, A Ladder to the Sky shows how easy it is to achieve the...
Literary Fiction Ireland

Hexen 2.0: Suzanne Treister
Suzanne Treister and Lars Bang Larsen
Book
HEXEN2.0 is the sequel to HEXEN 2039 which imagined new technologies for psychological warfare...

The Girls Are All So Nice Here
Book
Two former best friends return to their college reunion to find that they’re being circled by...
psychological thriller dark fiction

Christine A. (965 KP) rated Lies in Books
Dec 9, 2018
The author did such a fantastic job at making the characters so realistic I sympathized with them, but was also suspicious of each of them at different parts of the book.
When I realized I was nearly finished the book but the story was not complete, I thought the author was going to rush the ending. Some authors end a story as if they have reached their minimum amount of words needed for an assignment. Rest assured, Logan did not.
In one of the blurbs, Nancy Macfarlane (Fiction Addiction), described “Lies” as “one of the scariest…”. I do not think it was scary but definitely was a page turner. I added T.M. Logan to my list of authors to read.

The Luminaries
Book
It is 1866, and Walter Moody has come to make his fortune upon the New Zealand goldfields. On...

The Search
Book
**Preorder the new psychological thriller from Howard Linskey now!** Someone knows where the bodies...
Clearly made on a punishingly low budget, and the vision of the future is occasionally a bit wonky from a modern perspective, but the five episodes written by series creator Chris Boucher are some of the best, most intelligent, wittiest and most cynical SF ever broadcast by the BBC. The other episodes not so much: everything gets a bit campy and there are a lot of national stereotypes on display. (Plus, the theme tune has been called the worst in TV history, and most of the incidental music is rubbish too.) Even when it's not particularly good, it's always trying to do something a bit different, and David Calder is consistently excellent as Spring. Not the first nor the last SF or fantasy show to be cut loose by the BBC before it had a chance to realise its potential.

Awix (3310 KP) rated A Wrinkle in the Skin in Books
Sep 13, 2019
Worlds away from the 'cosy catastrophe' label which this kind of book is occasionally lumbered with, this anticipates The Road in many ways: the central image is of a man and a boy making their way across the devastated landscape, scavenging to survive and trying to avoid lawless mobs of other survivors. Christopher's ideas about human nature are crushingly cynical but unpleasantly compelling; the psychological depth of this book makes most similar works of fiction look frivolous and lightweight. Still, for all the skill with which it is written, this story is both tragic and depressing (the book does a good job of making you realise the difference between the two). It's telling that while it concludes on the promise of hope, it's only a promise: an actual happy ending would feel grotesquely inappropriate. Not without its strengths, but a tough read in many ways - other apocalypses are much more fun.

The Bass Rock
Book
A modern gothic triumph. Spectacularly well-observed, profoundly disquieting and utterly riveting....
Historical fiction Scotland