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S**.
This Author is Amazing
The Black Farm is one of the most relentless, imaginative, and horrifying books I have ever read and it easily earns five stars from me. From the first page, Elias Witherow drags you into a nightmare that doesn’t let go, weaving a grotesque vision of hell that feels both surreal and terrifyingly possible.What struck me most was the world-building. The Black Farm is not just a backdrop, it’s a living, breathing entity. Every landscape feels like it’s pulsing with dread, from the grotesque farming fields to the monstrous beings that stalk the damned. Witherow’s imagery is vivid to the point of cinematic, painting scenes that linger in your mind long after you’ve closed the book. It’s grotesque, yes, but never in a way that feels gratuitous; every horror serves to deepen the sense of despair and hopelessness the characters endure.The characters themselves are equally compelling. The protagonist’s journey through this torment is raw and human, filled with moments of fear, anguish, and a desperate grasping for survival in a world designed to strip all hope. What really impressed me is how Witherow balances the shocking horror with deeply emotional beats. Amid all the blood and chaos, there are moments of vulnerability and reflection that make the story hit even harder.On top of that, the pacing is perfect. The story never drags, and every chapter pulls you deeper into the abyss. Just when you think you’ve adjusted to the madness, Witherow pushes the boundaries further, showing you something more bizarre, more grotesque, and more fascinating than before.If horror is meant to disturb, provoke, and challenge, then The Black Farm is horror at its finest. It’s not just a story; it’s an experience, one that leaves you shaken but strangely fulfilled. For readers who want a horror novel that doesn’t hold back, that builds a universe as cruel as it is captivating, this book is essential.Elias Witherow has written something unforgettable here, and I can’t wait to dive into Return to the Black Farm to see what new terrors lie ahead.
R**E
Don’t pass this one by!
I liked this book so much more than I thought I would. I typically prefer more “realistic” stories but this book really took me by surprise. It has a very unique concept with some pretty vile characters. Definitely more on the extreme side with topics that will be triggers for some but well written and captivating.The one thing that bothered me more than anything else was probably the author’s over use of the word hissed when referring to a character speaking.
A**
Must Read
Dark, twisted, and unforgettable. This is horror at its most nightmarish—disturbing imagery, an unrelenting pace, and a story that sticks with you. Not for the squeamish, but a must for extreme horror fans. I can say as someone who is an avid reader, this is easily in my top 5 favorites of all time.
H**)
Consider my rating a 2.5
Elias Witherow’s horror novel The Black Farm, about what happens after you commit suicide, is a wildly mixed bag. He says in his author’s note that he wants to bring “fresh concepts” to and “breathe new life into” the horror genre. While much of this book is in fact surprisingly original, there are veins of terribly stale stereotypes and tropes shot through it. Some very unfortunate ones, in fact.Nick and Jess are at the end of their ropes. Jess had a miscarriage, Nick’s father died in an accident, Nick lost his job, he received an eviction notice, and Jess’s sister was diagnosed with terminal cancer. They decide there’s only one way to handle their problems: a joint suicide. When they take a whole lot of sleeping pills, Nick wakes up in a very strange place. The sun is a sickly ball of red dripping black fluid. Red tears rend the sky. A disfigured monster of a man is dragging him into a building, where he’s told that he’s on the Black Farm ruled by The Pig. When Heaven and Hell couldn’t decide what to do with those who committed suicide, they compromised by creating this place. The Pig was put in place over it, and it went a little crazy. Now the abominations created by The Pig (the Pig-Born) torture and kill people over and over, and they’re repeatedly reborn onto the Farm to suffer and die again. Nick is frantic with worry for Jess, and determined to find her any way he has to.Content note: Suicide and suicidal ideation. Rape and torture. Dismemberment. “Breeding” monstrosities. Cannibalism. Vomit. Fatphobia, as well as racial stereotype, and the stereotype of the “perfect woman.”I’ll get the bad parts over with. The vast majority of the bad guys are fat, and the stereotypical fat = evil trope is heavily drawn. The only Black character lived in “the projects” and killed himself with a drug overdose. Jess is the most insanely perfect woman ever: perfectly pure, perfectly loving, perfectly understanding, perfectly supportive at every turn. She barely talks, is a victim in need of rescuing, and meekly does everything Nick tells her to. She’s so thoroughly one-note on her pedestal it’s ridiculous; she’s a shining beacon of “no real woman could ever remotely live up to this.” The other woman who shows up, Megan, is largely there to suffer so that Nick can be pushed into his character development. There’s also a very big theme of “you had no idea how good you had it and you should have appreciated it while you could” with respect to people who are suicidal, and that’s incredibly unempathetic. There’s a character who, within five minutes of meeting Nick, casually spills all his greatest weaknesses to Nick. I facepalmed. The book could also use another editing pass.There are some aspects of the worldbuilding that don’t make sense to me. The island on which the Black Farm is found isn’t huge, yet it seems almost sparsely populated. If no one can die without being reformed in another location on the island, and every suicide arrives here, and apparently women can have children here, then how on earth is there no overpopulation? How are there not human children running around? For that matter, why does everyone speak English? When people die on the Farm and are reformed, they clearly return in some sort of better health than when they died, so are there any effects that linger? Since food and drinking water are hard to come by, can someone starve/dehydrate to death? Is it possible to become ill? Is clothing reformed as well? I don’t need every question answered, but I need to feel like the author has a handle on how things work, and I don’t.I don’t often read “extreme” horror; I made an exception for this one because I saw the book recommended a lot on a certain books of horror group. I will give the author this: he makes the nastier content absolutely integral to and necessary to the plot, which is what I want when I read extreme horror. It’s key to how Nick changes and what he accomplishes; it isn’t heaped on for sheer titillation.The idea of the Black Farm is absolutely fascinating. It’s this little somewhat-out-of-control reality with an all-too-vain godlet running it. The Pig wants the power its betters have–it wants to create life, and a world. It isn’t mindlessly evil. It leaves me wanting to know more, and I like that. Nick’s journey from loving boyfriend desperate to find his girlfriend to insane badass doing every last thing he can think to do is what made this an otherwise good book for me.
T**Y
A must read for horror fans
So good. This was my first book by this author and I will be getting more. I couldn't put it down. Horror, gore and an unlikey hero.... amazing.
K**R
4⭐ 0.2🌶️ psychological horror fiction
Unlike anything iv ever read before. Repulsive, creepy psychological horror.It was so disgusting i even dream about it🤭🥂 to Elias Witherow for writing The Black Farm.Unmatched, no competition was found.I do think that the 1st sagment of looking for Jess could have been made shorter. I was very close to loosing interest there.😏The world building was done so well, but it coud have been shorter, some parts for me were a bit repeatative😏Loved this book❤️
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