The Shadows: A Novel

This is absorbing, headlong reading, a play on classic horror with an inventiveness of its own... As with all the best illusions, you are left feeling not tricked, but full of wonder.
- The New York Times
The haunting new thriller from Alex North, author of the New York Times bestseller The Whisper Man
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Community Reviews
The Shadows is a phenomenal novel! It kept me on the edge of my seat the entire time, and when I thought I caught onto the authors secrets of what was happening. The genius turned my world upside down, and left me speechless all with this novel.
Lazy review time! Also it would be hard to not spoil anything while providing details beyond the what's already in the blurb.
Creepy. Twisty. Sad. Hard to put down once I got about 1/3 of the way through. A lot going on but easy to keep it all straight. Looking forward to reading another Alex North book.
4 Stars
Creepy. Twisty. Sad. Hard to put down once I got about 1/3 of the way through. A lot going on but easy to keep it all straight. Looking forward to reading another Alex North book.
4 Stars
The Shadows is a great read about urban legends and lucid dreaming. It reminded me of the Slenderman phenomena of today. The book was written from multiple points of view so you get into the heads of a few different characters. I thought it had a fairly brisk pace and is definitely worth your time. Alex North is becoming a new favorite.
solid 4 star read.
I thought that the dual timelines were done well and the twists/turns were executed in a good way and did surprise me. Was definitely a creepy read.
I thought that the dual timelines were done well and the twists/turns were executed in a good way and did surprise me. Was definitely a creepy read.
“…she could still recall the inherent horror of her teenage years. The way she had struggled with negotiating a world that seemed to be constantly shifting; the confusion and doubts about the best way to behave in order to fit in; the web of competing tensions and pressures. Most of all, she remembered the desire to escape from it all - to be anywhere apart from where she was, and to find the person she was meant to be, as though the real her were already out there somewhere, and one day they would meet and shake hands. Teenagers were not rational…and the world was not always kind to them.” Page 88
“How old everyone has got, I thought. And how strange that a generation I remembered as being strong and sturdy and reliable was now vanishing away into old age.” Page 270
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