There’s something unsettling about watching a man get exactly what he prayed for. Not because success is frightening. But because sometimes it arrives like a beautifully wrapped gift with a slow fuse hidden inside. That was the feeling that stayed with me while reading Blight of the Ivory by Yudhishthir Singh. Not loud horror. Not theatrical darkness. Something quieter. Like a ceiling fan turning in an empty room long after everyone has left. Akshat isn’t a dramatic her
Some books don’t knock — they slip into your life like a whisper behind your ear. Relics was that kind of whisper for me, the kind that makes you turn around in a crowded café even though you know no one is there. I picked it up on an evening when the world felt a little too ordinary, a little too predictable, and within a few pages Tim Lebbon reminded me why I fell in love with fantasy and horror in the first place — because they crack open the mundane and let a little wild