Reviewed by kimbacaffeinate on

3 of 5 stars

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Disturbing, addictive and unsettling….

Joel Whitley left Bentley ten years ago after a shaming. He returns to see his brother play ball and stays to find his killer. Something is wrong in this town and something or someone is watching.

Sheriff’s Deputy Starsha Clark, the sister of Joel’s high school boyfriend, has never stopped searching for answers after her brother disappeared. She and Joel join forces to find Dylan Whitley’s killer. Their investigation leads them to startling discovers, a cult like presence and the Bright Lands. An urban legend talked about in hushes.

Caffeinated Aspects:

  • Fram delivered an eerie tale. He slowly built up the suspense and ominous feel. As things were revealed I found myself hooked, and for the first three-fourths I became caught up in this twisted tale.

  • The writing felt like early King, and the storyline slowly built as we realize something dark lives within Bentley, Texas.

  • The Dreams were foreboding and added to the atmospheric tones.

  • Luis Selgas brought Joel to life from his fears to his inner dialogue. This was my first audio with him, and I hope to hear more.
    Joel was fleshed out, and while he lives happily and openly in New York, coming home to Bentley reminds him of why he left. I love seeing diverse characters in genres I enjoy. Joel felt realistic and was fully developed.

  • The author through Joel and the town shed light on the conservative, closed-closet dynamics of small-town rural bible communities.


  • Decaffeinated Aspects:

  • There were several significant secondary characters, but they weren’t as fleshed out as I would have liked. Too many fell into classic small-town stereotypes. I wish the author developed characters like Kimbra or Brittany. They shined only towards the end.

  • The twisted horror centered on disturbing sexual acts involving high school football players and the adult men of the town. Particularly those in positions of authority like school staff and law enforcement. Drug use, distribution and money were used to lore these young men. I found it disturbing and while I love dark horror, I couldn’t shake the wrongness of it. Let me be clear, this had nothing to do with the fact that this involved homosexuality. I prefer my horror to me more of the killing, dismemberment variety when dealing with evil entities.

  • While the story pulls you along and we get a sense of the evil and what feeds/awakens it, I honestly walked away shell shocked from the events in the last quarter but not entirely sure what the heck happened.


  • A twisted and dark tale with hints of King. Will I try Fram again? Yes, he kept me listening and I am curious to see how his writing evolves.



    Review originally posted at Caffeinated Reviewer

    Last modified on

    Reading updates

    • Started reading
    • 18 October, 2020: Finished reading
    • 18 October, 2020: Reviewed