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The Haar

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“I don’t fear death... but they do.”

Muriel McAuley has lived in the Scottish fishing village of Witchaven all her life. She was born there, and she intends to die there.

But when an overseas property developer threatens to evict the residents from their homes and raze Witchaven to the ground in the name of progress, all seems lost… until the day a mysterious fog bank creeps inland.

The Haar.

To some it brings redemption… to others, it brings only madness and death. What macabre secrets lie within… The Haar.

Romantic and deranged, The Haar is a gore-soaked folk horror fairy tale from David Sodergren, author of The Forgotten Island and Maggie’s Grave.

206 pages, Kindle Edition

First published May 17, 2022

About the author

David Sodergren

19 books1,513 followers
David Sodergren lives in Scotland with his wife Heather and his best friend, Boris the Pug.

Growing up, he was the kind of kid who collected rubber skeletons and lived for horror movies. Not much has changed since then.

Since the publication of his first novel, The Forgotten Island, he has written and published a further eight novels, including the gore-soaked folk-horror Maggie's Grave and the romantic and disturbing The Haar.

You can follow David on Twitter and Instagram.

Praise for his books -

THE FORGOTTEN ISLAND

“A blood-drenched love letter to Lovecraft, handled with impressive authority and confidence."
James Fahy, author of The Changeling series


NIGHT SHOOT

"Night Shoot is wildly entertaining. If you’re not laughing, you’re scared out of your mind.”
Sadie Hartmann, Mother Horror

DEAD GIRL BLUES

“It takes guts to write a book like this and nail it in the way Sodergren does.”
Matt Redmon, Night Worms

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5 stars
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72 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 1,566 reviews
Profile Image for Chrissy.
132 reviews234 followers
July 13, 2023
Is "sentimental horror" even a thing? Well, it is now! This book was so good, the main character is a wee Scottish granny, facing unwanted changes to her village, and you're rooting for her the whole way through. There's themes of loneliness and bereavement, but also gore. I live by the sea in Scotland and often see the haar rolling in, I won't look at it the same way again! This haar (coastal fog) brought something in with it... and it's not Brigadoon! The memoirs at the end, kept by David Sodergren's own gran, were a perfect addition.
Profile Image for Peter Topside.
Author 5 books1,244 followers
September 1, 2024
Everyone’s got a price. Everyone except Muriel McAuley. This book was nothing like I imagined it to be, but I loved everything about it. Muriel is such a deep and unique character that you were completely immersed in from her first explosive scene and everything beyond that. You felt for her in this awful situation where she is much older, widowed, being forced out of her home, all her friends are leaving the neighborhood, etc. Your heart breaks for her circumstances, but the fire inside her belly is alive and well. She is adventurous, sassy, caring, and spry. And Avalon is the very definition of horror, but is actually quite an endearing creature, too. And their dynamics together are just ‘bangarang.’ David Sodergren also had all these different plot elements worked into one another, ranging from revenge to a love story to just straight up horror at times and more. And it all worked together perfectly. This was an absolutely fantastic read and couldn’t be more worthy of a perfect 5/5. Bravo!
Profile Image for Zain.
1,686 reviews216 followers
September 17, 2024
Seven Hours With The Haar.

The Haar is a monster that I cannot describe, even though I was given a brief description of it by the author.

As a monster it is very lazy, until it gets started, then it becomes violent and like a tsunami it goes crashing through whoever is unfortunate enough to be in its way.

It will never be a bad monster when it comes to who is gonna get it. I mean who it is going to kill. Bad people look out. The Haar is coming for you. Long live the Haar.

Four stars. ✨✨✨✨
Profile Image for Brandon Baker.
Author 2 books7,660 followers
May 5, 2023
This was bloody, disgusting, beautiful, sad, and charming in an odd way.

The best way I can think to describe is like if The Thing and The Pisces had a Scottish baby.

I absolutely loved it!! I want to reiterate this was disgusting- holy body horror!!!
Profile Image for Vicki Herbert .
600 reviews113 followers
August 4, 2024
You are Completely Surrounded!
Come Out With Your Hands Up!...


THE HAAR by David Sodergren

Oh dear! There may be spoilers. 2 stars. I'm sorry, but I didn't find this story the least bit plausible or entertaining...

Let's jump in...

The story had a good premise. After all, who isn't a wee bit afraid of a fog bank and what may lurk therein...

John Carpenter certainly addressed that fear head-on and quite well in his 1980s movie, THE FOG...

But...

This story was a study in hatred and bigotry on many different levels...

The novel centers on the little Scottish town of Witchaven and an 80-something year old widow woman, Muriel...

The town...

... is being forced out of their cottages and off their ancestral land by Big Bad American billionaire Patrick Grant...

... who seems to be able to buy off the local Scottish police and news reporters with all his dirty American money...

As the book rambles endlessly on about the Ugly Americans, where is the law and order regarding the Scottish police? Do they not protect their citizens against murderous American billionaires?...

Who's ugly now?...

Speaking of ugly, what about portraying the youth of Scotland as murderous thugs easily hired by the Ugly Americans to rob and kill their elderly folk...

In the story, these young men set fire to an old retired man after robbing him and then laugh as he's trying to put the fire out...

And...

Lathering with anticipation of collecting their murder-for-hire filthy American money...

Now that's UGLY!!...

Then there's the cliche yelled from a police blow horn at an 80-something year old widow: You are surrounded! Come out with your hands up!!...

Reality check:

Can you imagine that really happening? I found this part to be completely laughable.

I don't know; I like my stories to be a tad more plausible than this. Otherwise, it borders on comedy (and not in a funny way).

It is too bad that the one interesting aspect of the story, the monster found in the fog by the old woman, was overshadowed by the inane nonsense of the rest of the story.

So, sorry, but I can't really recommend this novel to any serious horror fan unless they are ready to suspend all logic and enjoy bashing Americans.
Profile Image for Ali L.
274 reviews4,522 followers
January 27, 2024
I know you’re sick to death of the story of an elderly woman finding an amorphous blob that ends up being a sea creature which feasts on her enemies and embodies her late husband but buckle up because you’ll want to read this one, too. This book, which sells itself as a “folk horror fairy tale” is a hybrid of Little Shop of Horrors and Harold & Maude but way, way gorier. It also made me cry really hard because the ending is very sad and sweet and beautiful and once again this is a book about a disembodied nervous system with one big eye and endless bloodlust and when I say I cried I mean I cried. 10/10, would trick American capitalists into my bathtub to feed my blobby friend.
Profile Image for Johann (jobis89).
726 reviews4,463 followers
May 5, 2022
4.5 stars. Sodergren has created one of my favourite characters of his in The Haar. Muriel is a fab wee badass granny!!
Profile Image for Pisces51.
629 reviews19 followers
March 17, 2024
THE HAAR [2022] By DAVID SODERGREN
MY REVIEW 5.0 STARS OUT OF 5

This was my first brush with the writing of Scotland’s David Sodergren. Frankly, I was impressed. Ironically it is slotted into Occult Horror/Fiction like Black River Orchard I just reviewed. That, however, is where any semblance ends.

The plot reminded me of a writer snatching a common tragedy out of the newspaper, and just changing the location and the name of the ruthless property developer. In this case Sodergren sets the reader down in the Scottish fishing village of Witchaven and offers up the could-be-tragic-but-isn’t protagonist of Muriel McAuley. The antagonists are the soulless property thieves trying to vacate lifelong residents out of their homes and out of town. These developers are ruthless and unafraid to dish out harm and even murder to empty the village and raise the houses to the ground when bribes do not work.

Oh—the title of the novel [“The Haar”] is the mysterious, spooky fog bank that creeps inland. This outing by Sodergren has been called “a gore-soaked folk horror fairy tale” and also been deemed “romantic and deranged.” Tell the truth and shame the devil. It is all of that and SO much more. I REALLY liked it.

This is a tender tale of an aging widow named Muriel who still yearns for her beloved husband who was lost at sea long ago. Muriel is kind, level-headed, and realistic about her predicament and its likely negative outcome. One day she rescues a poor sea creature who had become stranded on the beach and was slowly dying.

How the heck can I elaborate very much without letting the cat out of the bag (not really a “cat” to be fair). This is a marvelous horror story. It has all the blood, gore, and violence you could want in a horror novel, and yet it manages to pull your heart strings until they almost snap, sniff, sniff (tissues, please!)

I can only say that the Scottish author may have grabbed a generic tale of unethical if not lethal property developers taking the elderly people’s homes away but he handled it like a piece of clay and molded it into one Helluva intense, moving, and unforgettable tale.

This novel is a respectable 206 pages and the author perfectly paces the action and the plot twists. His character development is well done and the spunky character of Muriel is a delight and an inspiration. I loved the plot, the twists and turns, and the ending in particular. I liked it very much. A horror story with humor, romance, and all the blood and gore you could manage. Well written and an intriguing read. I have no criticisms at all. Hey! Why did I rate this one 4.0 Stars? Let me correct that momentary lapse in judgment. It was before I wrote my review and thought about it some more.

TERRIFIC TALE OF HUMAN EVIL AND SECOND CHANCES FROM THE SEA
Profile Image for Netanella.
4,466 reviews12 followers
November 23, 2023
Wow. I think I just found my new favorite gory horror author. With just 200 pages, Sodergren delivers a kickass Scottish granny, octogenarian Muriel McAuley, one of the last holdouts in a tiny seaside village refusing to sell out to the golf course loving American developer. As things go from bad to worse for Mrs. McAuley, she discovers a strange new ally left behind in the Haar, the thick Scottish mist that covers the shoreline.

It's pretty darn rare for seniors to play the starring role in this type of story. And I find it rarer still for an author to blend the goriest descriptions of death and dying with some very heartfelt, even charming love scenes. It's a book that's dedicated to the author's granny, with the fitting inclusion of her memoir at the end, featuring a Scottish granny that won't give up her home or her memories. I was rooting for our plucky heroine, even as the death count rose, penises were liquefied, and the lawyer's head pops off like a balloon detached from a stick.

Wow, again.
Profile Image for Nicolai Alexander.
72 reviews1 follower
March 23, 2024
The most delightful horror story I’ve ever had the pleasure of reading, with one of the fiercest, bravest and most genuine elderly ladies to ever grace a fictional dimension of existence. You, Sodergren, had me already at the opening lines, of which I am convinced will win the “Best opening lines of the century”-award when that one eventually comes around. Yes, when I read that “Muriel Margaret McAuley was eighty-four years old the first time she saw a man turned inside-out by a sea monster”, my heart skipped a beat, and I knew I’d love it, that I’d hold on and never let go.

Just like Muriel.

The blurb would tell you that she was born in Witchaven, a Scottish fishing village, and that she “intends to die there”. It would also tell you that “an overseas property developer threatens to evict the residents from their homes and raze Witchaven to the ground”. But embedded between those lines, you see, is the heartwarming and heart wrenching story of the villagers, the purity of simple living and harmony with nature.

And covered in all that gut and blood and gore is a story about greed, ambition and desperation.

That kind of story is classic, with a message so simple, yet so powerful.

Sure, rich people love money above all else and they do whatever they can to get more of it, common decency and human lives be damned. They just walk right up to you and smack you in the face with the fact that “laws don’t apply to the rich” (12). But Muriel is powerful too. She’s not afraid to fight back and say that “men like that – rich men, with no morals – did whatever it took to get ahead. They lied and cheated their way to the top, treading all over the little people beneath them without a care”, and then, with sad eyes, she sees the consequences of that behavior to the world around her and concludes that “A man with no respect for nature was the worst type of man.” And as such, “she would never understand someone who could walk through Witchaven and not feel their heart sing”. (32-33)

This message is carried on throughout the whole story, and I’d say that it’s one of the better characteristics of the book as well as its weakest feature. The fight against greed, against the “unnatural sounds” of capitalism, its invasion of privacy and encroachment on nature makes me invested in Witchhaven and Muriel, makes we want to fight for her, with her, makes me engrossed in the story. But the rich and the greedy are all basic caricatures here, fueled by judgmental views about them, devoid of any nuance, any sympathy and redeeming qualities. Had the rest of the story not been so rich with romance and passionately aggrandized with gore and otherworldly violence, I’d eventually grow tired of it, but I never did, because Muriel is the embodiment of longing and sweet memories, of having something to fight for, of finding a reason to live.

Indeed, let’s not forget that she’s old. And old age is most likely just a distant, vague, illusory state of being far into the future to many of us. But we might even fear it too. A lot. Thanks to Sodergren, though, and thanks to Muriel, I’m convinced that, when the time comes, I can decide to be so much more than my weakening body, that I can dare to venture beyond my physical age. As long as I have my memories, my willpower, my love, I can still live a meaningful life and fulfill new dreams and, as one other reviewer said, “trick American capitalists into my bathtub to feed my blobby friend” anytime I want!
Profile Image for Steve Stred.
Author 84 books644 followers
April 19, 2022
By this point, if you’ve read any of my work, you’ll be aware that David Sodergren has been pivotal in my progression as a writer. Since my collection ‘Left Hand Path: 13 more tales of black magick’ was eviscerated by some reviewers due to horrendous editing, Sodergren has been by my side guiding my writing, editing and copy/line-editing my work. So, it should be no surprise that I’m always excited to read what David conjures, knowing how phenomenal of a job he does taking my Playdough manuscript and turning it into a Marble work of art (lol).

Do I think David’s work is grossly overlooked? Absolutely. Look at his body of work thus far; ‘The Forgotten Island,’ ‘Night Shoot,’ ‘Dead Girl Blues,’ Maggie’s Grave,’ The Perfect Victim,’ and ‘Satan’s Burnouts Must Die!’ I would call all of these Indie Horror Masterpieces. Sodergren fully embraces the DIY Self-Publishing model and the level/caliber of books he’s given us are second to none. And I’m not going to include our co-written novel ‘The Navajo Nightmare’ as I think that would be too biased, but I will say, his opening salvo that makes up the story is simply one of the best Splatter-Western stories released in that genre over the last few years.

Which brings us to ‘The Haar.’ Maybe a year ago? eight months ago? I can’t fully recall, but at some point we were discussing what each of us was working on and what releases we had coming down the pipeline and he discussed this one. He’ll correct me if I’m wrong here, but I believe back then it was being referred to as ‘Witchaven’ and he jokingly called it his monster-romance novel. He wasn’t far off. And don’t get that phrase stuck in your brain and not take a chance because I used the dreaded ‘R’ word. No, instead, Sodergren does what he does best and gives us a stunning character piece layered below a horrific plotline.

What I liked: The story follows 80+ year old, Muriel McAuley, life long resident of the Scottish fishing town Witchaven. This was where she was born and raised, met and married her husband and continued to live when, years ago, his fishing boat was found, but no signs of Billy were ever found. Now, a billionaire American is buying up all of the land and houses, building a massive golf course and resort, but some residents are holding their ground and refusing to sell. Muriel being one of them.

The story itself follows Muriel as she struggles to comprehend how this place she loves with all of her heart is being ripped away from her. She doesn’t have many years left and just wants to enjoy them in the home she’s lived in for decades.

But, if you look at that synopsis closely, you’ll see Sodergren says this is a gore-soaked folk horror fairy tale, and that’s just what we get. We get a looming fog, the haar, that sweeps in one day and brings something from the ocean. Muriel saves it, connects with it and gets to experience some of life’s moments again. Things and memories she thought long since buried, returning and reinvigorating her.

With Muriel, Sodergren has really created a truly memorable character. From the words shared in the afterword, we see the why and how, but even without that piece of backstory, you’ll fall for her and want to root for her no matter the odds.

Now, I haven’t forgotten about that ‘gore-soaked’ aspect either. Expect the brutality and bloodbath that David is known for. Think ‘Maggie’s Grave’ and you’ll have an idea, and while this one doesn’t have as much as most of his books, it works perfectly to highlight the horrors and events Muriel is living through.

The ending was perfect and the varying POV’s we get to see some of those last moments through was fantastic to really highlight the emotional aspect of this book.

What I didn’t like: The main bad guy and his son, aka The Grant’s, I think were a little underutilized in the sense that I felt they loomed but their dirty work seemed too detached. It’s hard to really say everything and remain spoiler free, so I think once you’ve given this one a go, you’ll understand.

Why you should buy this: Sodergren is the rare combo of TBR-buster and book slump-buster. You always know that even a 300 page book of his will feel like a single sitting because you’ll be so entrenched in the world and his writing flows so beautifully, that you don’t realize how long you’ve been reading.

Muriel really is the best character he’s created yet and the relationship and tenderness we get to see and experience was second to none. I’ll be raving about this book until his next one comes out, but this shows why Sodergren is so good and hopefully now, he’ll stop being overlooked.
Profile Image for Leo.
4,658 reviews498 followers
September 3, 2024
Been wanting to read it for a while a d I had hyped it up a lot in my head based on reviews. It didn't disappoint one bit more the opposite. It was sad, emotional, intense, gory in parts and had romance in it which I didn't expect. Think this is going to be in my favorites of the year.
Profile Image for Horror Sickness .
791 reviews327 followers
August 31, 2022
Wow...I mean...wow

I did not expect David to give me another amazing unexpected story, yet here we are. When you have been loving every book by an author, you are scared that the next one might not meet your expectations.

David Sofergren is such an underrated author and his books have all been so iconic to me.

This story is a gloomy tale about a small community by the sea in Scotland fighting to keep their homes. A big company wants to buy all the houses in the village to open a big golf club. Some of the old residents that have been living here all their lives are fighting back to keep their home and be left in peace.

One night, the mist comes to the village and brings something with it that will change everything. Especially for our main character Muriel, a lonely elderly woman that will not give up her home, her memories and her identity.

Not too much more I can say since I want to keep this spoiler free but this was such a great fast paced and action packed story that I did not want to put it down. Expect a lot of body horror and gore scenes that will definitely make your stomach turn.

David can write characters of any age and in any situation and manages to bring us different types of horror with every single one of his novels.

I can not wait to see what is the next nightmare that David is brewing at home with his extremely adorable pug.
Profile Image for destiny ♡ howling libraries.
1,877 reviews6,105 followers
August 5, 2024
Muriel Margaret McAuley was eighty-four years old the first time she saw a man turned inside-out by a sea monster. You might think it would bother a woman of her age, but, as Muriel was fond of saying, she had seen a lot in her eighty-four short years.

I've had friends recommending David Sodergren's books to me for ages, and I've always been interested in them, but it was just one of those things that I never quite got around to until now. I'm so happy to have finally picked this book up, though, because Sodergren has a new fan in me and I can't wait to read everything he's written so far!

Muriel is such an incredible main character. I adore elderly women as main characters anyway, but I don't think I've ever seen one who was quite so incredible as a horror book's protagonist. She's such an easy character to empathize with and to root for, especially given how terrible the villains in her story are. I loved the story, the setting, and the strange, slimy Avalon so very much and I'm sad this book is over. I wasn't ready to say goodbye to Muriel's character and I can easily see this as a book I would want to revisit in the future just to spend more time with her.

Buddy read with Malli!

Representation: gay side characters

Content warnings for:

———
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Profile Image for Stuart Coombe.
280 reviews15 followers
October 1, 2023
Started badly, got worse.

So many points I could raise, but in short it’s just like a very cheesy 80’s action film, full of cliche and hammy writing. Parts were just so clunky.

It literally makes no sense in places.

You keep getting sucked out of the story by ham-fisted metaphors and very convenient simplistic short-cuts.

By way of an example, three boys go to commit an arson they are paid handsomely for. They then realise someone is in the house they are burning so they douse him with petrol, beat him up and set fire to him. They do this without a seconds thought like suddenly becoming a murderer is akin to deciding last minute at a fast food restaurant that you want chicken rather than a burger. The fire is then blamed on the fact the deceased was a smoker, because fire officers wouldn’t be able to detect the use of an accelerant 😂

The main character is in turn a very frail 84 year old then able to lift heavy weights, kick over a wheelbarrow, do things a healthy person half her age wouldn’t be able to.

Every bad character has zero redeeming features. 100% bad. No nuance.

Afraid to say I pretty much dislike every aspect of the novel.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Adrienne L.
218 reviews76 followers
March 7, 2023
What a strange, gruesome and moving mix of folk horror, cosmic horror, revenge thriller and bizarre romance. Mrs. McAuley is a great heroine.
Profile Image for Chris Stewart.
58 reviews
June 17, 2024
2* that's all yer getting. I keep saying it...I'm done with modern "horror". It's all rubbish.

*EDIT - I added an extra star as, to be fair, it's actually fairly well written.

Summary: Wee highland granny, fighting off Donald Trump (that IS who the author means) and his cronies as they force the locals out of their homes to build a golf course. ALL of the company people, even the everyday construction workers, employees and police (all paid off....ffs!), are either evil megalomaniacal sociopaths, murderers or ra*ists. So when a sea monster (creature) is found dying (but it says it is immortal later in the book, I think the author forgot about that) on the beach, she takes it home. No clue why she can't just fling it back into the sea like any normal person would if they found a sea creature dying ON A BEACH. Anyway...this animal abusing wee granny takes it home and sticks it in the bath, and when the wee guy cuts her we realise that it needs blood to survive. During an event where the company pays some local teenagers to murder her old friend Arthur by dousing him in petrol and lighting him on fire, one of the boys is stabbed and stumbles along the beach and into oor wee granny's house where he is swiftly eaten by the creature. Once it has enough blood it changes into the likeness of her husband Billy, lost at sea 15 years before, and for the rest of the book they begin to fall for each other. Aw...twoo wuv right there.

Ultimately, the rest of the book becomes a pile of preposterous nonsense. In the space of 1 days our sweet old 84 year old granny and the creature become Bonny and Clyde serial killers, feeding the creature victims like Seymour and his man-eating plant. But they're all evil megalomaniacal sociopathic murdering ra*ists right...so who cares. Ah nuance, where hast thou gonst?

Realistically, I could get onboard with the ridiculousness of the plot, but I get the impression the author was trying to make a social statement about progress vs. traditional highland life. I hope this wasn't the case and he was just writing a wee story, because he's taking a mulligan (golf term) on that hole. A better author would find nuance in the situation the village and oor wee granny find themselves in. The parable with Trumps golf estate in Aberdeenshire is obvious, and the discussion deserves to be had around the government and local councils bypassing regulations to give planning permission to these companies. Personally, I would rather see him attack all the fucking wind farms they put up in Scotland's natural habitats; have a pop at those city-dwelling environmentalists and their crusade in destroying the natural beauty of our countryside.

And here lies the issue I have with this book; there is no balance or subtlety here. The owner and his son are cardboard cutout villains, hell every character is. I'm surprise the author is Scottish as "it's a bit twee" as we Scots say to describe excessively quaint portrayals of our culture. There is no detailed description of highland life, or why traditional highland life is being eroded by modernism. Why should I care? The villains are SO bad, that it was just an obvious forced plot ploy to instil a negative reaction in the reader towards them. Injecting internal conflict here, on the part of both the company moving folk off the land and by oor wee granny feeding Audrey (sorry Billy) would have been a much better mechanism to deliver a reaction.

In the end, oor wee granny ends up in a televised showdown with the company and the police (not joking) takes the owner hostage, kills him, gets turned into an immortal creature by the creature (the mother of macguffins) and they live happily ever after in Atlantis. Well Atlantis is not mentioned, but hey...why the hell not. It wouldn't be a stretch in this book.

Ultimately, I had more fun in thinking that SHE is the villain: her family don't talk to her or visit her, neither do Arthurs, everyone else in the village has accepted they live in a shitehole and taken the money and moved. SHE'S clearly the evil megalomaniacal sociopathic murderer, not some cute wee highland granny. Luckily, it's a short book it would have easily been a DNF.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Willow Heath.
Author 1 book1,379 followers
Read
May 28, 2024
Legend of the world of grassroots horror David Sodergren delivers an absolute banger with The Haar, a unique work of terror that features an eighty-four-year-old protagonist, a shapeshifting sea monster, a soulless billionaire, and some unexpected but very welcome romance.

Muriel McAuley has lived in a small Scottish fishing village all her life; her husband was lost to sea a decade ago; and now a rich American wants to raze the village to make way for a golf course. And only the elderly residents of Witchaven have the guts to stand up to him. But as they fall, only Muriel remains. Her and the sea monster she found on the beach.

The Haar is a brilliant work of terror packed with really grotesque moments of body horror and some heartbreaking romantic scenes. A one-of-a-kind horror novel that proves the power of Sodergren's unique brand of terror.

My full thoughts: https://booksandbao.com/modern-horror...
Profile Image for Dan Corey.
237 reviews60 followers
April 10, 2023
The Haar earned all the stars. The concept was great. It had tons of heart and a lot of sweet and tender moments, counterbalanced with absolutely horrific body horror, and anchored by a rebellious elderly female protagonist that you root for with all your heart and soul from page 1. The story, oddly enough, shares DNA with Hellraiser, The Thing, Starman and Cocoon (talk about a random stew), and all the elements just blend together perfectly. I loved and highly recommend it. And you can’t beat the price at just $3 for the e-book on Kindle!

Oh, and the setting is dope, too. It takes place in a small seaside village in Scotland.
Profile Image for Sjgomzi.
273 reviews148 followers
July 10, 2022
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ to read #47. I loved this book!
David Sodergren has never received less than a perfect rating from me for any of his releases. The only horror author to have this distinction, and he just gets better and better. One of the best I’ve read all year!
Profile Image for Jocelyn.
870 reviews
July 21, 2024
I loved every page of this unique horror! My blood boiled for MRS. McAuley - as a homeowner I just felt enraged at the land developer - and if I continue on this thread of thought, I’ll give spoilers. But just know, I was seething as I turned the pages.

And the ending! Spectacular!
Profile Image for Grapie Deltaco.
759 reviews2,059 followers
May 16, 2024
Somber, grotesque, beautiful, haunting, and so unspeakably good.

This horror novel has so much to say about loss, loneliness, grief, regret, and moving forward. And also corporate greed.

It’s a gruesome revenge story with a violent sea creature wreaking havoc that you can’t help but root for. I wanted him to kill more people in the name of saving this town if we’re being honest.

This was insane.

CW: murder, violence, blood, gore, body horror, dead loved ones, grief, animal cruelty, self harm (for feeding/offering purposes), suicidal ideation, torture, brief sexual content
Profile Image for Cat Chaotic.
37 reviews6 followers
May 9, 2023
I had really high hopes for this book but sadly it was a huge letdown. I admit I had different expectations to what the story was going to be about and what it’d entail. Had I known it was about an elderly woman becoming obsessed with a jelly creature and pretending it’s her husband - I would’ve never picked the book up.

Sadly this is the exact king of plot or trope (?) that I hate with a passion. The widow left behind and stumbles upon something they feel connects them with their old partner and now their whole story and personality revolves around this love story that has already ended long since the story began and we have to be force fed their romance while the widow spirals into this delusion in order to ignore their problems. The worst part is the ending. We never know what really happened to Muriel’s husband but that’s okay. She decides to spend the rest of her life with the jelly thing in the ocean and just pretend that’s her real husband. Isn’t that great!? No, not really. That’s terrible! Why would she want that for herself? It feels so out of character as well. Despite how much she wants the jelly thing to be her husband she is aware that he actually isn’t him. Therefore shouldn’t she be embracing death and possibly actually having a chance to reconnect with her REAL husband in the afterlife? Instead of settling for sea jello?

Muriel is a likable character at first but like I said. I abhor characters that make their personality solely based on someone they love. So once she starts becoming infatuated with the sea jello she became less likable and all the more detestable. To the point that I was no longer rooting for her and was beginning to lose sympathy for her. Is she a bad person? No. Not at all. But she does become increasingly annoying as the plot continues and again the obsession and her sole goal being to just be able to peacefully hold a sea creature in her house and have it shape shift into her husband so she can play house with it - it’s just not my jam. Her sadness is completely understandable and valid. However the lengths she goes through to keep her delusions alive does come off as rather pathetic. It’s one thing to miss your husband. It’s another to keep a sea creature alive and beg it to cosplay as your hubby cause you have unresolved issues.

Despite the amount of times I have been ragging on the sea creature, I actually do like him. I think Arthur and Avalon (the creature) are the only likable characters in this book. The gore scenes involving Avalon were the best parts of the books. That as well as the fire scene with Arthur. They’re well written and the imagery was perfect. It also happens to be the only interesting parts in this book. Avalon and his characterization carried the plot on his back. Being able to explore him as a creature but still keep some aspects hidden was great! It helped keep the allure and what he’s capable of in the dark. Which made it all the more interesting to read about.

However the interest stops there. This isn’t necessarily a horror novel, I’d personally say. It does have horror elements but it’s mostly about a elderly woman coming to terms with her grief and regrets. The gore just spices it up a little but not a whole lot. It really is a drama more than anything. I wish there was more to say but looking back at it there really isn’t much to say.

That’s kind of literally all that happens in the book. Other than the obvious plot of being forced out of their cottage homes and such. It really is just about a woman not wanting to give up her house, still trying to process the loss of her husband, and constant repetitions about how she’s not afraid of death. Which confuses me all the more about the ending unless I’m interpreting it wrong?

Sadly this was set up not to be my cup of tea from the very beginning. It’s main plot is a trope I don’t like and I had gotten the wrong impression upon what the book would be about and what would take place. So when it wasn’t that, I was heavily disappointed and turned off. So that’s my bad. I can see more open minded people who don’t share my sentiments about tropes like this, actually liking this. Its not a bad book. Just not really my taste nor what I was looking for in terms of strictly being a horror novel.
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Ruby.
181 reviews5 followers
June 21, 2024
Shape of Water & UP (Disney) meet Horror. A very sad, romantic and gory book about an old lady trying to fight the corporation that is trying to take her home.

She meets something that changes everything, and feelings she had for her long dead husband rise again...

Caught myself cheering on as each bad guy died a very traumatic death.

Honestly, I saw this book more of a haunting romance and the trials of an older woman defending herself and just trying to live.
Profile Image for Wayne Fenlon.
Author 5 books79 followers
June 18, 2022
THE HAAR is sort of the Scottish equivalent of THE MIST by Stephen King or THE FOG by James Herbert, but then again not really. It's a quick read, a cool take on a typical premise. I don't mean that in a bad way. It's just when the story begins it feels very familiar, a story you think you've seen a hundred times before, but please stick with it. It's all just to get the lay of the land. At around maybe 20% things start to take a turn and it doesn't let up from then on.
It gets pretty gruesome, but there's a genuine heart running through it. That's all I kind of want to say without ruining anything. Like I've said many times before, I rarely read a synopsis. I most often go on an author's previous efforts or recommendations from fellow readers. With David Sodergren, it's a no-brainer. He never lets me down.
4.5 stars rounded to 5.
March 10, 2024
The Sea and unknown

This was a book for my March book club read and I can see why it was selected. This book grabbed me from the first page and it was so hard to put down. I do love how the author wrote this book with elderly people as main characters! I loved the wit and I don’t care because I have lived a long life attitude amazing! This book is about a community that is threatened by a big corporation that wants to be rid of the residents but someone people will not be bought or sold. There are strange things that are in the sea that shows up on the shore. Although a quick read this is a great book.
Profile Image for Katie T.
1,148 reviews240 followers
August 29, 2024
3.5 stars …. I originally rounded this up to 4 stars but after further thought I’m changing my rating. Honestly this was a bit boring to me, but enjoyable gore throughout. There was very satisfying gore and killing at the finale which initially made me round up.

I’ll say the most unrealistic thing about this creature feature is the use of the word c*nt by the American characters. Clearly the work of a Scottish mind.
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