
It introduces 7-year-old Wen and her fathers, Eric and Andrew, who are taking a family vacation at their remote New Hampshire cabin. That is very much the vibe of Paul Tremblay’s Cabin at the End of the World, which mixes a violent home invasion with a looming apocalypse to chilling effect.

What more could you want in a book, honestly? Instead, it feels like an important message wrapped inside entertaining, thought-provoking nightmare upon nightmare with a scarred-for-life-flavored cherry on top.

reason - into scenarios so terrifying that it doesn’t feel like a lesson being preached at you from a pulpit on high. One of my favorite things about the horror genre is how it’s able to distill core themes about our everyday lives – good vs.
