A small-time criminal. A has-been rock star. A shadowy government agency. And a severed hand whose dark powers threaten to destroy them all.
When leg-breaker Hutch Holtz rolls up to a rundown apartment complex in Portland, Oregon, to collect overdue drug money, a severed hand is the last thing he expects to find stashed in the client’s refrigerator. Hutch quickly realizes that the hand induces uncontrollable madness: Anyone in its proximity is overcome with a boundless compulsion for violence. Within hours, catastrophic forces are set into motion: Dark-op government agents who have been desperately hunting for the hand are on Hutch’s tail, more of the city’s residents fall under its brutal influence, and suddenly all of Portland stands at the precipice of disaster. . . .
But it’s all the same for Katherine Moriarty, a singer whose sudden fame and precipitous downfall were followed by the mysterious death of her estranged husband—suicide, allegedly. Her trauma has made her agoraphobic, shackled within the confines of her apartment. Her son, Nick, has moved home to care for her, quietly making his living working for Hutch’s boss.
When Hutch calls Nick in distress, looking for someone else to take the hand, Katherine and Nick are plunged into a global struggle that will decimate the walls of the carefully arranged life they’ve built. Mother and son must evade both crazed, bloodthirsty masses and deceitful government agents while exorcising family secrets that have risen from the dead—secrets, they soon discover, that might hold the very key to humanity’s survival.
Can you resist the hand? Find an excerpt from the next Fever House novel at the end of the book.
Like, I’m not even sure how to describe it. It’s horror and crime and raw, screaming intensity.
It’s definitely gruesome at times and extremely fast paced, yet doesn’t sacrifice character development at all. Our characters (good, bad & indefinable), were so perfectly realized.
FEVER HOUSE by Keith Rosson Affiliate Link: https://bookshop.org/a/7576/978059359... Release Date: August 15th, 2023 BISAC Categories: Horror - General Science Fiction - Apocalyptic & Post-Apocalyptic, Thrillers - Suspense: Sub-Genre/Themes: Cursed objects, Hit Men, City Life, Musicians, Crime Drama, Government agencies, Agoraphobia, Family secrets
Writing Style: Gritty, Humorous, back-and-forth POV with a large, ensemble cast
What You Need to Know: This is an investment. The novel is sectioned into parts, chapters are medium length, not buzzy & short, and not too terribly long. Peppered throughout are ‘transcripted, scientific, classified, governmental-style secret-agency type’ field notes about a being named Michael. There is a lot to keep straight at first, a sizeable, ensemble cast but it gets to be second nature after about 30%. The apocalyptic energy layered with graphic violence and crime-thriller-esque suspense makes this an intense read. Horror enthusiasts that enjoy lighter fare may want to proceed with caution. There are plenty of characters to invest in at an emotional level if you choose to dive in.
My Reading Experience: When gritty, suspenseful crime thrillers collide with supernatural, apocalyptic horror novels, FEVER HOUSE is the result; an explosion of graphic violence, colorful characters, and buck-wild storytelling. I was laughing three pages in. The two main characters kicking this whole thing off are straight out of Mean Streets. You’ve got a small-time hood employing some amature muscle to collect debts by acting like heavies and roughing people up when they have to. They get involved in something that totally blows up in their face–just one bad decision after the next. It’s as entertaining and amusing as it is cringe-worthy; I wanted to read what would happen next through my fingers. I LOVE THE DIALOGUE. Rosson has that whole rough-around-the-edges street lingo down solid. A few new characters get added into the chaos batter, making everything a bit more complicated but in a good way. I loved the way Rosson put the reader in the driver’s seat for the mystery. It was exciting to pick up clues and breadcrumbs while I developed theories. I love the ensemble, alternating POV/narrative storytelling when it’s done right. I think Jurassic Park was my first exposure to it and it has stuck with me all this time. The risk, of course, is the reader will fall in love with one timeline and come to hate the others as just a distraction. This happened to me in SIGN HERE by Claudia Lux. And while this didn’t exactly happen to me in this book, some of the chapters were long and there were a few lags in the action but my overall reading experience was one of curious engagement most of the time. Final Recommendation: FEVER HOUSE is cool and tempered like smooth jazz when it needs to be and full-on metal with the volume all the way up the rest of the time. Toward the end, it was classic punk rock overtones with a great hook for more in this universe. I bought my ticket!
Comps: LAST DAYS by Brian Evenson mixed with A VOICE SO SOFT by Patrick Lacey and a dash of SIGN HERE by Claudia Lux, infused with Hand of Glory mythology.
I must admit that trying to describe this amazing novel is difficult. But I also have to say that I loved it and it will be in my "best of" list for 2023.
It's a noir-ish tale that goes to completely unexpected places. Gangsters, black ops government agencies, a punk rock band, a severed hand, a detached eyeball, and an audio recording with a subliminal message are all included in this novel.
It's the way in which the author puts them altogether that really makes this book stand out. Fever House is a good name because this is like a fever dream in book form but one that still flows and ebbs so well that, when we're reading it, it makes sense.
The characters are absolutely in the spotlight here and each one is given their due in such a way that it never feels like any of them are disposable. In fact, we learn about some of them and grow attached until the author kills them in some very unexpected ways. It's so visceral when it happens that it feels like a gut punch when that happens.
This is one of those books that you'll be glad to sink back into when you take a break. It begs to be read and experienced and I think it's better to go in blind. It's definitely a great horror novel and I think it's going to be talked about by a lot of people once it releases. I give it my highest recommendation.
Edit: I did really enjoy this for the most part- I think if you liked It Rides A Pale Horse, Damnation Game by Barker, or Infected by Scott Sigler, this is right up your alley. It’s like a mix of mob/government conspiracy thriller, with some some supernatural elements in the mix. It’s gory, over the top, and has some very tense moments, although it does get bogged down with some of the POV’s (def preferred some over others). But yeah, it just kinda ends out of nowhere!
OG review minutes after finishing: I’m honestly kinda pissed that I didn’t realize this was the first book in a series, and would not have picked it up had I known. This was great and I was looking forward to seeing the absolute insanity that was building, but it ends on not even a cliffhanger, more like he just stopped writing the story? It feels unfinished? Like it’s so abrupt I feel like I just got into a car accident. My head is spinning.
And I know (now) it’s unfinished, but this is why I don’t read unfinished series because this feeling is frustrating at hell 😂
Anyways, go into this knowing it’s a series, and you’ll enjoy it. It’s gory, ridiculously tense (and just ridiculous in general), but yeah, stupid abrupt ending. Will probably update my rating at some point because I did actually really enjoy this, but man did that annoy me 😂
This was chugging along at 4 stars for a long time (it's very long!) but the last act lost all of what made the rest of it so great. It was not the usual horror novel thing where the scary stops being scary when you start trying to wrap it up. No, here what had been so great was the pacing. This novel moved at practically a full sprint almost all the time. There were flashbacks and exposition but they mostly filled in useful context and didn't slow down. In fact sometimes they only raised the stakes because you were in the middle of some real intense stuff and you wanted so much to get back to it and find out what was happening.
Unfortunately the last act here plods along. Which is weird because that is where the most is happening, but all the characters suddenly have very little to do. And while everything around them should be at a very high volume, it reads weirdly like background noise. A bummer. Especially as this is clearly the setup to a follow up novel to come.
Most of it, though. Most of it is a lot of fun. Horror this year hasn't really done much for me, only a few standouts, but here I loved the mashup of horror, gangster story, aging punk rockers, and shady government conspiracy. It sounds like it shouldn't work but it works. Mostly because of that full sprint pace where things keep happening and happening and it isn't very long at all until you do not understand how so many things have happened and how they can keep happening. And yet they do.
Shave 50-100 pages off the last act and you have a very very good book.
Fever House felt like a film noir in book form. It was giving Grindhouse and Pulp Fiction with a paranormal horror twist. There's a small time criminal/bagman, a has-been rockstar widow and her son, a shady black-ops government agency, and a severed hand that drives anyone near it literally mad. I will just say this, don't get too attached to any character in this book, although I think that's going to be nearly impossible because they are all so fleshed out and you will want to root for them, even the shady ones. My only complaint was that even though there was a great cast of characters it was hard to keep up with all of them, and it took me a really long time to finish this book because it just had a lot going on in it. I would love seeing this made into a movie though. Keith Rosson, link up with Quentin Tarantino or Robert Rodriguez please.
Thank you Netgalley, Random House, and Keith Rosson for the eARC.
Yall! This book is an absolute BANGER! And please let's take a moment to appreciate that cover!🤘🤘🤘
And yes, I realize that term is typically associated with music, but the musical influences within this book are pure metal. I want this to be a movie so badly... and I want to hear the soundtrack for it!!
The level of intensity in this book... is just insane. To be frank, it's nearly impossible for me to sum this up into a coherent review... I'll give it a shot...but seriously just buy it and read it yourself because I simply am incapable of doing it justice.
FEVER HOUSE is packed with grit, grime, and gore. It is incredibly fast-paced, and yet Rosson still delivered great development of the storyline and its many characters... and trust me, there are quite a few. You're gonna love some, and others there will be no love lost when he offs them!
FEVER HOUSE beautifully melds together crime with horror, so this book is versatile. And will appeal to different types of readers.
My one complaint, and it's not even a legitimate complaint... is that now I have to wait for book 2. That's it... that's all I got. I'm not even going to complain about how long it was because it moves so fast that I honestly didn't care.
If you have to pick one book to read this year, let it be this one. I guarantee that in a literary world full of the same old trope after the same old trope, this BOOK will be unlike anything else you read this year.
As always, thank you to the publisher and netgalley for providing me a copy in exchange for an honest review.
This should’ve been so good but it was extremely dull the way it was written. It unfortunately didn’t hold my interest even if there was some violence. It’s hard to explain but even though a lot happened, it felt like nothing did. I think I’m just disconnected from this authors writing sadly.
Thank you to Netgalley for an advanced copy of this book!
This was one of the most badass books I have read in awhile! A special thanks to NetGalley for giving me the opportunity to enjoy it. It was definitely metal! Rock on.
After so many chances in life, this is what he chose? This abomination of love? Love skewered through the devil’s prism, made a mockery. Some flailing second chance, with Hell trailing along behind him.
A million chances in life, and this is the road he chooses.
Dead, deathless, alive, he holds out his hand toward her.
Fever House is the first book in a duology by author Keith Rosson. The book takes place in Portland and is focused around a severed hand that induces violent compulsions and ultimately madness to those nearby. I erroneously assumed the aforementioned severed hand would be an occult Hand of Glory but alas, it is not. That, along with the stunning cover, is initially what drew me to buy the book.
Unfortunately this book wasn’t for me. I found the pacing slow and my attention often drifted elsewhere while reading. It really felt like a slog to finish all 426 pages which is unusual for me. However this novel has many great ratings and was lauded by Stephen King as a scary and well-paced story.
Disappointing, considering all the praise it gets here. I couldn't get into this crime and horror combo. Not really. Not entirely. Style, structure; I wasn't very comfortable with it. Especially struggled with the parts where the author dives into the past and background of his characters.
Happens a lot. And quite frankly, I didn't care that much for most of them. Because of that overload perhaps, I don't know. They just didn't do much for me. And it also messes with the flow of things. Gotta keep the fan spinning once the shit hits it, right? No room for chitchat when all hell just broke loose.
At least that's how I (usually) feel about it when it comes to horror. Wouldn't go as far as calling this a total misfire, there's an undeniable eeriness to the whole thing with the remnants and the outcome wasn't unsatisfactory either, but I kept disconnecting, so no, didn't meet expectations.
I went in pretty blind with this one, but the cover gave me high hopes. Right off the bat we are given this grimey-mobster noir feel with a “job” that goes horribly awry and the introduction of this ominous severed hand. The minute the hand enters the scene, everyone connected to it feels its pull as violent whispers invade their thoughts. This was some top tier horror that was delivered under the guise of a gritty grindhouse movie that played out so vividly in my mind, I feel like I already watched it…but now I want an actual movie of it made. It was that good. Gangsters, black op government agents, recordings of the inconceivable, family secrets, a punk band that somehow reaches cult-like status overnight, possibilities of other cursed body parts and the truths about who or what they belonged to. Extremely visceral, borderline jump-scares as the barbarity explodes in front of us. An unrelenting assault on the mind as we find out just how far these cursed fingers can reach.
Almost didn't make it to work today, couldn't put the book down. Luckily I devoured the last forty pages with minutes to spare. What a wild and intense read! The imagery is bound to take up residence in my head for a long time! Thank you Netgalley for the opportunity to read this in advance of publication. As always, my opinions are my own.
Fever House opens with two leg-breakers, Tim Reed and Hutch Holtz, doing their rounds, collecting money for their boss. Initially, you get the noirish vibe but once they find a peculiar artifact in the freezer of one of their "debtors", all hell breaks loose.
The object in question? A severed hand that makes people around it mad and violent, filled with the urge to hurt, bite, and rend. Of course, the government is involved; it’s all a part of a potentially world-breaking conspiracy. Once the action hits the ground running, it never stops. The story is as propulsive as possible.
Fever House is structured around multiple point-of-view characters and the narrative switches off between them as the plot moves forward. I like multi-POV books, and I think Rosson has done a stellar job of making each character multidimensional and intriguing. Other than showing various perspectives, it allows the book to move fast - it has a fresh sense of mobility and non-stop action.
Anyway, as the hand changes hands (:P), we meet new characters, learn about their backstories, and see them run for their lives. Those include a disgraced undercover agent, a mutilated angel, a hyper-ambitious field agent, a former rock star, and more. If this makes you wonder if it’s not overstuffed with characters, it isn’t. Not in my opinion.
The action is kinetic and moves fast, and each vignette builds on the previous one and allows to create a full picture of the apocalyptic scenario. One element I need to mention and that I loved to bits included interstitial material such as top-secret memos and transcripts from interviews with Saint Michael that provide insight into the powerful forces at play.
Additional points for the way Rosson handles family drama and relations balancing them with kinetic action, splatterpunk elements, and grit. A word of caution: the explosive, somewhat rushed climax suddenly stops and the story ends on a cliffhanger. The good news is the sequel is written (I think) and scheduled to hit the shelves in 2024.
Fever House is a kinetic horror with cinematic scope and pacing, excellent characterization, and top-tier writing. It’s a wild, brutal ride, and it gets my highest recommendation.
5/5 stars! Wow! This book is stunning. It absolutely took me by surprise. The premise was crazy and super out there so I wasn't sure what to expect. But the plot was phenomenal, the story was warped and creepy and intense, and I couldn't put this book down. Probably my top horror read of the year so far. And that cover was awesome!
I received an advance review copy for free through NetGalley, and I am leaving this review voluntarily
Have you ever read a book and thought about doing an Annie Wilkes, lock them in a room and make em write the next book immediatley, no? Oh me neither was just saying 👀 .....This was incredible! Reading this felt like watching a high octane car chase in a Bond movie, it was fast paced, gritty and violent, I loved the supernatural elements and if I had to define its genre I would struggle, a suspensful crime thriller that has supernatural and noir elements, this has so much going on that if you laid it all out you'd think it wouldn't work, but Keith Rosson's talented writing seamlessly blends a concoction of criminal chaos and conspiracy theories with a backdrop of punk rock that has a witty dialogue that has you hooked from the very start, although this is very fast paced no sacrifices have been made on the character development, authentic, relatable and moving in parts this was an intense edge of your seat read with a barrage of unexpected twists and turns and is most definitely unlike anything else you've ever read, its going on the favourites of this year pile with my other precious babies 📚
I don’t think I knew what I was getting into when I started this book. It is wild, weird, occult inspired, and a feverish hell that speaks of a reckoning to come.
It all started with a hand in a freezer. A hand that will get into your mind to make you want to do terrible things. There is a family that the book centers around, a black government agency, an entity called Saint Michael that just might be an arch angel, and some bad characters that give off a mafia vibe.
I loved the chaos of this book and can’t wait for the next one. Yep, there is going to be a book 2!
It took me a really long time to decide on how I was going to rate this book. It is well written and is a really unique horror book. I found myself enjoying the story but I felt the end was sort of abrupt and like something was missing. Then I seen that there is a 2nd book coming and that made it make a little more sense to me. Definately read this of you're looking for something different. 3.75 🌟
4.5 stars! Bloody, gross, visceral, a new take on the genre. Loved the characters! Well written, well paced, not too long or too short. Can't wait for the next installment!
Thank you to NetGalley, Keith Rosson, and Random House Publishing Group for the complimentary ARC of this book. All opinions are my own. I was not compensated for this review.
When you pick up a Keith Rosson book, you know you're guaranteed a good time. And Fever House is no exception. This one took me by surprise, and took me places I hadn't expected.
It starts off simply enough - Hutch and Tim are out on the hunt for people who owe their boss Peach drug money. But after kicking the door in at one particular junkie's place, they discover more than they bargained for. The dude had a severed hand hidden in the freezer. And not just any severed hand, mind you. This one starts messing with your head. The closer in proximity you are to it, the darker and more violent your thoughts turn.
Scared of the thing, and desperate to get rid of it, Hutch calls his buddy Nick, a man who makes his living locating rare items for clients. Meanwhile, dark goverment agents are employing the remote viewing skills of a "subject" by the name of Saint Michael to narrow down its whereabouts, hot on the hand's trail. We learn that it once belonged to them and they are not going to stop until its back in their possession.
Hutch, Nick, and everyone else who crosses paths with this cursed thing are now running for their lives. A strange hell is about to be unleashed in Portland, and they are going to have front row seats when the madness begins.
Rosson seamlessly weaves multiple narrative threads together throughout the book, building character backstories that just continue adding layer upon layer to the main storyline, culminating in one big spider's web of death, deception, and destruction.
Be warned: there are some intentional loose ends here, as this book is part of at least a two-book series. You won't find a fully realized end, but the one we were served up should hold us over nicely until the next book drops.
well this was a high-stakes PLUNGE into darkness. horror and grit moving at the pace of a freight train. graphic, bloody, but impossible to put down. stoked to the read the second book.
Let me preface it by saying I am not a zombie story person. However, Fever House was absolutely amazing. I was hooked from 30% in. I recommend everyone to read this, especially on audiobook as Xe Sands is an amazing narrator.
Fever House is gripping story full of raw emotion and laced with devilish terror.
A pair of thugs, trying to be badass, but each with their own endearing insecurities, show up at a job at the wrong house at the wrong time. As they try and collect what is owed to their boss, they encounter a severed hand. No physical contact is required to feel it...the pull, the grip, the hold that takes over the two bad guys and changes their lives forever.
The story progresses, bringing in many players and settings. Each character is well developed, pulling the reader into their individual plights. The overarching connection, the hand, spreads its evil hold, pulling the many people together down a dark path filled with terrifying and violent events. There are a lot of people to keep track of, however, the author does an impeccable job at switching points of view quickly and clearly.
Events unfolds. Chaos grows. The pieces start to come together, slowly and effectively building the intrigue of the reader. Each time something is revealed, the scope of the horrific events heightens, leaving the reader clinging to the pages, wanting to know what will happen next. The putting together of the pieces is a delight for readers that like to be involved in figuring out what the hell is going on.
The core set of characters are extremely well developed, full of humanity and raw emotion. The strange occurrences are infused with unsettling terror. The writing is intelligent, full and satisfying.
Fever House is not a quick, easy read, but rather an immersive, in depth experience for the serious horror addict. Despite the breadth of existing work that applies the underlying concept - an infectious disease turning humans into animals that turn on each other - it is well executed in Fever House. Furthermore, the root cause of this infectious terror is unique, fresh and creative.
The ending is an explosive and surprising treat for the reader that committed to this deep journey in terrifying evil.
Keith Rosson’s latest literary feat is Fever House, a wild, dark, disturbing novel that is truly unique. I’ve read all of Keith’s work (and, full transparency, I published his first three novels and debut collection at Meerkat Press, so I’m obviously a big fan), and this story further hones his signature style: gorgeous, atmospheric prose; well-developed, totally relatable, down and out characters (I always recognize traits of a few family members and/or old boyfriends in the mix), and well-plotted story lines that merge the everyday with the weird and sometimes truly terrifying. With Fever House, the fun starts with a couple of criminals who go to collect a debt for their boss and end up with a severed hand that they quickly find has the power to drive people to violence. There are several agents in a shadowy government agency that had the hand, lost the hand, and now will do just about anything to get the hand back. Michael, a mysterious intelligence source that the shadowy government agency has been holding literally for decades, as Michael’s “visions” are what clued them in on the hand in the first place. And Katherine Moriarity, a former musician now confined to a small perimeter around her home due to anxiety issues, and her son Nick who get caught up in a suspenseful game of cat-and-mouse that will see Portland, Oregon on the brink of collapse as the hand sets in motion a terrifying potential end-of-days scenario. Keith is masterful in fleshing out his characters, and especially Katherine and Nick, both suffering in the aftermath of a tragedy that happened years before involving Nick’s father.
This is the first book of what I believe will be a two-part series, and although a lot of storylines come to a nice conclusion by the end, it will require book two to find out how it all ends.
I power-read through Keith Rosson's Fever House since I had a short loan time on it from the library. It's 400+ pages & rotates through a variety of narrators so it's probably good I read it in a short window because that makes it easier to keep up with everything. I loved Smoke City more but this was good satanic zombie punk black ops horror, lol. It could have been a bit shorter but I still found it a fun book. Biggest disappointment is that the ending sets it up for a sequel (which comes out next year). Nooooo!!! I'm a standalone book person, not a sequel/series reader! That said, I'll totally be reading the next one. Lol.