The Deading
Unnatural horrors and a town in peril: Stephen King's Under the Dome meets
The Last of Us in this harrowing climate fiction novel.
When a hidden evil emerges from the depths of the ocean, the tight-knit town of
Baywood is caught in a climate disaster of mysterious origins: an unusual wave of
sea snails enter the estuary and transform wildlife, seascapes, and finally, people.
Once infected, residents start “deading”: collapsing and dying, only to resurrect,
changed in ways both physical and fundamental. After the government isolates
Baywood, paranoia and surveillance run rampant. A newly formed cult called the
Risers starts targeting those who are not deading: the introverted bird-loving Blas,
his jaded older brother, Chango, the widow Kumi, and her cautious neighbor,
Ingram. The survivors of Baywood eventually must choose to escape, to
investigate the deading's origins, or to become subsumed by this terrifying new
normal.
At points claustrophobic and haunting, soulful and melancholic, The Deading
lyrically explores the disintegration of society, the horror of survival and
adaptation, and the unexpected solace found through connections in nature and
between humans.
"1144264638"
The Deading
Unnatural horrors and a town in peril: Stephen King's Under the Dome meets
The Last of Us in this harrowing climate fiction novel.
When a hidden evil emerges from the depths of the ocean, the tight-knit town of
Baywood is caught in a climate disaster of mysterious origins: an unusual wave of
sea snails enter the estuary and transform wildlife, seascapes, and finally, people.
Once infected, residents start “deading”: collapsing and dying, only to resurrect,
changed in ways both physical and fundamental. After the government isolates
Baywood, paranoia and surveillance run rampant. A newly formed cult called the
Risers starts targeting those who are not deading: the introverted bird-loving Blas,
his jaded older brother, Chango, the widow Kumi, and her cautious neighbor,
Ingram. The survivors of Baywood eventually must choose to escape, to
investigate the deading's origins, or to become subsumed by this terrifying new
normal.
At points claustrophobic and haunting, soulful and melancholic, The Deading
lyrically explores the disintegration of society, the horror of survival and
adaptation, and the unexpected solace found through connections in nature and
between humans.
19.99 In Stock
The Deading

The Deading

by Nicholas Belardes

Narrated by Robb Moreira, Luis Moreno, June Angela

Unabridged — 9 hours, 52 minutes

The Deading

The Deading

by Nicholas Belardes

Narrated by Robb Moreira, Luis Moreno, June Angela

Unabridged — 9 hours, 52 minutes

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Overview

Unnatural horrors and a town in peril: Stephen King's Under the Dome meets
The Last of Us in this harrowing climate fiction novel.
When a hidden evil emerges from the depths of the ocean, the tight-knit town of
Baywood is caught in a climate disaster of mysterious origins: an unusual wave of
sea snails enter the estuary and transform wildlife, seascapes, and finally, people.
Once infected, residents start “deading”: collapsing and dying, only to resurrect,
changed in ways both physical and fundamental. After the government isolates
Baywood, paranoia and surveillance run rampant. A newly formed cult called the
Risers starts targeting those who are not deading: the introverted bird-loving Blas,
his jaded older brother, Chango, the widow Kumi, and her cautious neighbor,
Ingram. The survivors of Baywood eventually must choose to escape, to
investigate the deading's origins, or to become subsumed by this terrifying new
normal.
At points claustrophobic and haunting, soulful and melancholic, The Deading
lyrically explores the disintegration of society, the horror of survival and
adaptation, and the unexpected solace found through connections in nature and
between humans.

Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

05/06/2024

A small California town is cut off from the rest of the country by a catastrophe of apocalyptic proportions in Belardes’s uneven debut horror novel. Bayside oyster farmer Bernhard Vestinos first notices something amiss when a rampant snail infestation overruns his beds, forcing him to take deadly measures. What appears to be a manmade eco-disaster ultimately proves to have an otherworldly component as a contagion with an inexplicable side effect spreads through town: people begin “deading,” dropping to the ground in apparent death throes, only to revive minutes later and obliviously go about their business. That’s enough weirdness for a government drone squadron to enforce a protective perimeter around the town. Within that inescapably sealed environment, the social glue of Bayside quickly gives way to the ascent of the Risers, a quasireligious cult violently hostile to the non-deading minority. Belardes toggles between the perspectives of a variety of townspeople, including the Enriquez brothers—Chango and Blas—but his efforts to give the horrors a human dimension bog down in the minutiae of their lives (especially the details of Blas’s amateur birding). Still, this patchwork of familiar horror plot motifs offers some fun scares. (July)

From the Publisher

Praise for The Deading
 
“Do not eat fish from these waters. Or oysters. Really, just stay inland. Except that, in The Deading, that doesn't necessarily mean you're safe.” —Stephen Graham Jones, bestselling author of The Only Good Indians
 
“With prose as precise and dazzling as a diamond, The Deading is a masterwork.” —Caroline Leavitt, New York Times bestselling author of Pictures of You and Days of Wonder
 
“Belardes is a fine writer. The Deading hits hard out of the gate and keeps escalating. A delightfully gruesome combination of science fiction and eco-horror.” —Shirley Jackson Award winner Laird Barron, author of Not a Speck of Light (Stories)
 
“The Deading is a stellar novel: superb prose and a compelling mix of horror, ecology, and social commentary. Darkly beautiful and chilling, The Deading will linger long after the read ends.”—Lucy A. Snyder, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Sister, Maiden, Monster
 
“A lyrical meditation on nature and mortality.” —Erika T. Wurth, author of White Horse
 
The Deading is a gorgeous and grotesque nightmare-vision of the inescapable connections between human beings and the natural world they so often exploit: a must-read for fans of eco-weird, cosmic horror, and dystopia.” —Kay Chronister, author of Desert Creatures
 
“With his standout novel The Deading, Nicholas Belardes delivers his own unique blend of smart, stylish, dark and deadly, ecological fiction. Belardes delivers thought-provoking horrors steeped in reverence for the natural world. A masterful debut, The Deading is the herald of a powerful new voice in genre fiction. Read it now and rejoice in the mind-bending and dark places it will bring to your summer reading and beyond!” —Daniel Braum, author of Serpent’s Shadow  
 
The Deading is, simply put, a masterful eco-horror tale. Featuring vivid characters, compelling science, and a unique and engaging premise, this book will pull you down into the murky depths and never let go. This book is a winner.” —Pedro Iniguez, Rhysling Award finalist and Pushcart Prize nominee. author of Synthetic Dawns & Crimson Dusks

Product Details

BN ID: 2940191539713
Publisher: Recorded Books, LLC
Publication date: 07/23/2024
Edition description: Unabridged
Sales rank: 504,824
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