Alex and Leslie Twisden said they would pay any price to have children. But some costs are too high.
Adam and Alice Twisden know they’re not like other kids.
Other kids don’t get locked in their rooms at night.
Other kids don’t hear strange noises outside their door.
Noises which are getting louder…
From a new name in horror, BREED is a stunning thriller in the vein of Rosemary’s Baby, brilliantly written, daring, and unforgettable.
Adam and Alice Twisden know they’re not like other kids.
Other kids don’t get locked in their rooms at night.
Other kids don’t hear strange noises outside their door.
Noises which are getting louder…
From a new name in horror, BREED is a stunning thriller in the vein of Rosemary’s Baby, brilliantly written, daring, and unforgettable.
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Reviews
The best horror novel I've read since Peter Straub's Ghost Story. By turns terrifying and blackly funny, BREED is a total blast.
Stuffed with everything a good horror novel needs - feral children, a hell-for-leather chase through the streets of New York and plenty of gross-out descriptions - BREED is chilling, gruesome and deeply, darkly stylish. Best of all, it's funny.
A nightmarish, yet sickeningly plausible world... An exceptional novel that's crying out for a movie adap
Novak puts an innovative spin on the idea that inside every parent lurks a monster, and delivers pulse-racing set pieces as a pervasive sense of dread blossoms into something poisonous....a stylish parable of greed
Delightfully entertaining...redolent of Roald Dahl at his creepy best
Above and beyond its fatality count BREED has originality on its side; the ending is a true shocker.
Chase Novak unleashes truly scary literary horror villains in BREED: Mom and Dad...a thrill to read
A slice of shivering dread