Red River Seven
-
-
3.6 • 19 Ratings
-
-
- $4.99
Publisher Description
Seven strangers. One mission. Infinite horror.
A man awakes on a boat at sea with no memory of who or where he is. He's not alone - there are six others, each with a unique set of skills. None of them can remember their names. All of them possess a gun.
When a message appears on the onboard computer - Proceeding to Point A - the group agrees to work together to survive whatever is coming.
But as the boat moves through the mist-shrouded waters, divisions begin to form. Who is directing them and to what purpose? Why can't they remember anything?
And what are the screams they can hear beyond the mist?
Internationally bestselling fantasy author Anthony Ryan - writing as A. J. Ryan - delivers a nerve-shredding thriller in which seven strangers must undertake a terrifying journey into the unknown.
“A madly entertaining amalgam of locked-room mystery, heart-racing thriller, and terror-inducing horror show that will keep you up late into the night and darken your dreams long after you turn the last page.”―Philip Fracassi, author of Boys in the Valley
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Bestseller Ryan (the Covenant of Steel series, as Anthony Ryan) demonstrates that his narrative gifts extend well beyond epic fantasy in this nail-biting postapocalyptic thriller. A man wakes up on a boat to the sound of a gunshot with no memory of who he is or why he's there but with the word "Huxley" tattooed on one wrist. Huxley finds that the gun was fired by a man with a "Conrad" wrist tattoo, who shot himself. There are five additional people onboard the vessel, all with famous writers' last names similarly tattooed on them and all with no personal memories, though they still retain some hyperspecific knowledge. ("The lung capacity of an average adult human male is six litres," recalls a woman sporting a "Rhys" tattoo.) Their helplessness increases when they find that they can't control the boat's path. Their only direction comes from an anonymous female voice on a satellite phone, who offers a dire warning: "Any member of your crew who recalls personal memories must be considered a danger." As the tension—and violence—ramps up, Ryan's worldbuilding comes into focus and he makes it easy to suspend disbelief. With thoughtful characterization and an innovative variation on a familiar theme, this impressive horror tale wows.