The Night House: A novel (Hardcover)
Staff Reviews
A horror novel from Jo Nesbo? Sign me up! The story starts off with a man-eating phone?? Doesn't matter, take my money!! THE NIGHT HOUSE is a novel in three parts. Part 1 is about a boy and his friends being haunted by an evil that the grownups in the down don't see or believe. Very Stranger Things or the Losers Club. In part 2, we jump ahead 15 years to their high school reunion where the evil has been waiting for their return. And part 3... you won't see coming! I genuinely didn't want to put it down! Absolutely perfect for Stephen King loyalists, haunted house fans and, of course, Jo Nesbo readers ( as long as you're willing to try something a little different.)
— Leslie“In The Night House, the horror begins immediately. And it only keeps calling from there.”—Josh Malerman, New York Times best-selling author of Bird Box and Spin a Black Yarn
In the wake of his parents’ tragic deaths in a house fire, fourteen-year-old Richard Elauved has been sent to live with his aunt and uncle in the remote, insular town of Ballantyne. Richard quickly earns a reputation as an outcast, and when a classmate named Tom goes missing, everyone suspects the new, angry boy is responsible for his disappearance. No one believes him when he says the telephone booth out by the edge of the woods sucked Tom into the receiver like something out of a horror movie. No one, that is, except Karen, a beguiling fellow outsider who encourages Richard to pursue clues the police refuse to investigate. He traces the number that Tom prank-called from the phone booth to an abandoned house in the Mirror Forest. There he catches a glimpse of a terrifying face in the window. And then the voices begin to whisper in his ear . . .
She’s going to burn. The girl you love is going to burn. There’s nothing you can do about it.
When another classmate disappears, Richard must find a way to prove his innocence—and preserve his sanity—as he grapples with the dark magic that is possessing Ballantyne and pursuing his destruction.
Then again, Richard may not be the most reliable narrator of his own story . . .
NEIL SMITH is a translator from Norwegian and Swedish based in Norfolk, UK. His translations include books by Jo Nesbø, Fredrik Backman, Leif G. W. Persson, Liza Marklund, Anders de la Motte, Arne Dahl and Kristina Ohlsson. His translation of Leif G. W. Persson's The Dying Detective was awarded the CWA International Dagger for best translated crime novel.
—Josh Malerman, New York Times best-selling author of Bird Box and Spin a Black Yarn
“The Night House begins like something from the mind of H.P. Lovecraft… And then at a little over the halfway mark of this slim horror novel, Nesbø begins 'Part Two' and readers are forced to rethink everything they just read. It’s a remarkable about-face…. After readers turn the final page of the book, it’s fun going back and picking up all the foreshadowing.”
—Associated Press
“Nesbø deftly guides readers on a journey much larger than many will expect from the slim volume . . . Expectations of genre, setting, and mood are subverted as a simple horror novel unfolds into a story that encompasses grief, mid-life crises, and more.”
—Library Journal
"Scary fun that won’t cause nightmares—or will it?"
—Kirkus Reviews
“Wild and ambitious . . . Nesbø shows a sure hand at crafting moments of terror.”
—Publishers Weekly
“A fast-paced escape of a book . . . Nesbø skillfully keeps the reader wondering where the story is going to go next and when, if ever, the main character will reach his happy ending—or if, in fact, he deserves to reach one at all.”
—Booklist