Cover Image: What Moves the Dead

What Moves the Dead

Pub Date:   |   Archive Date:

Member Reviews

My thanks to NetGalley for making an eARC copy of this book available to me.

This short novel is a very nice reworking of Poe's "House of Usher" story, set in the 1890's but with some new characters to help the plot along. Still a tale of horror, but also a tale of non-conformity in a time perhaps a bit more restrictive than ours today. Kingsolver never fails to give us entertaining stories, as this one shows so well.

Was this review helpful?

Really great story, thought J knew where it was going, but totally surprised me. Thanks to Netgalley for the opportunity to read this book

Was this review helpful?

I thoroughly enjoyed that. I was worried it would feel overdone, basing itself on the Poe story, but was a fresh-feeling retelling. Mostly this book was completely, thoroughly charming! I highly recommend for Poe lovers and dark fairy tale readers.

Was this review helpful?

When Maddie's head flops around on her shoulders...gasp, OMG!, is my own head on straight? Slimy strings of goo come out of fish anuses (worse than the usual stuff in fish poo) and there's not a dustpan in the world big enough to contain all the little white hairs shedding everywhere. Speaking of hares, there are icky zombie jerking rabbits that stare and stare and stare.

I know crowds will throw mold covered tomatoes at me, but I have to say it. T. Kingfisher's version of The Fall of the House of Usher is better than Poe's. Don't show up at my house with pitchforks and torches. What Moves the Dead is that good.

Gore and mushrooms. An amazing strong and interesting female secondary character and mushrooms. Wit and humor amongst the slime and mushrooms. Fantastic main characters, fantastic secondary characters and mushrooms. A really cool horse. Did I mention mushrooms? You don't want to make an omelet with these babies, not unless you want to find a fungus among us.

T. Kingfisher is one of my favorite authors. One of the reasons is that in all of her books, family, friends, even newly met people work together and are fond of each other. No snarking and insulting that seem to haunt so many books today. A story can be frightening, bloody and gross and still have pleasant characters. The fellowship between characters is wonderful to behold with a subtle humor running under the grim business. Easton is the kind of friend everyone should have. Even the interactions with Hob the horse are charming.

And yet the story is so very scary. It will make you take bleach to that little patch of mold in the corner of the bathroom sooner rather than later. After all, that fungus is creeping, creeping your direction.

I love this book and I'm grateful to Netgalley, T.Kingfisher, and Tor/Nightfire for allowing me to read and review an eARC of What Moves the Dead.

Was this review helpful?

What Moves the Dead is another standout entry in T. Kingfisher's already impressive horror portfolio, with her inspiration for the story this time being Edgar Allan Poe's "Fall of the House of Usher." A letter telling of Madeline Usher's frightfully declining health sent to ex-soldier Alex Easton summons them to the unfortunate and decrepit manse of the Usher family, with whom they were close childhood friends. All is not well in the crumbling home, of course, and dark secrets will challenge Alex's grasp on what is possible and put true terror into their heart.

This is an excellent gothic horror story with well-written and fully realized characters that immediately endear you to them and their plight. When the extent of the terror is revealed readers will not be disappointed, though they might be extremely grossed out.

Was this review helpful?

I love "The Fall of the House of Usher" by EAP, and this retelling is genuinely phenomenal. Kingfisher successfully makes the characters all feel real, which makes this retelling somehow feel even creeper and off-putting. The writing is genuinely stunning and incredibly emotional, genuinely it's such a rush to read with how nerve-wracking the story is and how gorgeous the prose is.

Was this review helpful?

Thank you NetGalley and publishers for providing me with this advance reader copy.

Description from NetGalley:
When Alex Easton, a retired soldier, receives word that their childhood friend Madeline Usher is dying, they race to the ancestral home of the Ushers in the remote countryside of Ruritania.

What they find there is a nightmare of fungal growths and possessed wildlife, surrounding a dark, pulsing lake. Madeline sleepwalks and speaks in strange voices at night, and her brother Roderick is consumed with a mysterious malady of the nerves.

Aided by a redoubtable British mycologist and a baffled American doctor, Alex must unravel the secret of the House of Usher before it consumes them all.

I love “The Fall of the House of Usher'' by Edgar Allen Poe, and I also love this retelling. Let’s start with the characters because they feel like real people. Their backgrounds and relationships are explained and used to good effect. The atmosphere is so creepy and aids the plot tremendously is the short span one has with the book. I do wish I had more, but the length is probably a good length for the plot and horror, not to mention it is a retelling of a short story. The cover is also stunning. Bravo to the artist!

This is a fantastic and horrifying retelling. 4.5/5

Was this review helpful?

In <i>What Moves the Dead</i>, T. Kingfisher (aka Ursula Vernon) remixes Edgar Allan Poe's "The Fall of the House of Usher" and it is delightfully creepy, wonderful gothic horror. I read it, immediately went and reread "The Fall of the House of Usher" (which I hadn't read since jr high or high school and now is available online in several places for free because it's out of copyright), and then I read <i>What Moves the Dead</i> all over again to savor the depth and texture of Kingfisher's work.

I've loved her writing since <i>Summer in Orcus</i> with few exceptions, and I open each one of her new works with an open heart, ready to love. This one brings the best of her naturalist sensibilities, the richness of actual Gothic & Southern Gothic lit, the entertaining spark of European multiculturalism (including an improbable American transplant), and a core conceit rooted in Poe's imagination together into something greater than its parts. I almost wish it were a full novel, although that would take it far beyond Poe's short story and possibly make it unrecognizable.

I loved the original characters, especially Miss Potter, and Easton's culture is one I would. love to know more about/see again. I loved the the linguistics asides and how deftly drawn were Easton's core assumptions about her tiny country and the world. The elements of nature were vividly detailed and, not to spoil, but I had visceral reactions where appropriate. :g:

I find novellas hard to rate because I nearly always want to take off a star for wishing it were longer, which isn't really fair to the form. So I'm going to call it 4 1/2 stars.


CW for animal harm.

Was this review helpful?

Deeply unsettling, stomach turning, and made my hair stand on end. I really enjoyed T. Kingfisher's take on Poe's work, and Alex Easton was the most endearing, delightfully 19th-century protagonist, with such an engaging sense of humor and a compelling backstory. The prose was lush, evocative, but at no point excessive. I felt like every word was put forth with intention. Kingfisher masterfully gives you enough information to sate your hunger for world-building, but not so much that it eats up most of the novella.

When the plot and the horror ramped up after about the midway point, I went from enjoying the novella to being utterly ensnared by it. I couldn't put this down and I would highly recommend it to any Poe or horror/gothic fan.

Many thanks to Tor Nightfire and Netgalley for the ARC.

Was this review helpful?

What Moves the Dead is a deliciously wonderful and incredibly rich gothic and atmospheric novel, so well built and fast paced that I wasn't able to put it down till I reached the end. I was absolutely captivated by the atmosphere, and the characters.

This novel submerges the reader in a landscape so imaginative and detailed that the information of the world building/plot never feels forced, and is never difficult to understand or picture in one's mind. I had an enjoyable time reading this and it held my attention the entire way through that I finished it within the day! I enjoyed every page and thought that the plot/story was very unique. Would recommend to anyone, especially to those who love a little creepiness in their lives…

Was this review helpful?

This was basically if you took Fall of the House of Usher and The Last of Us and mashed them together. A deliciously atmospheric and outright creepy book.

Was this review helpful?

I love T.Kingfisher's writing. This was a homage to The Fall of the House of Usher. A very good one. Reminded me of Mexican Gothic, but I enjoyed this one more as I am a huge fan and love the way she writes. I seriously would read her grocery list. I wish it had been longer, but that's the thing with a lot of her books...she tells you just enough to get a great story in, and doesn't write long unnecessary prose that just makes you end up bored with a story. Highly recommend and love that cover!

Was this review helpful?

What a fantastically horrific, ghastly, & revolting little book!! I love horror novels, but this one grossed & creeped me out unlike any others I can think of. I thought that Kingfisher's writing was extremely captivating & original, even if the novella was based on the Poe short story. She started using dramatic irony fairly early on in the book, and that heightened my emotions as I read even more. Absolutely loved this novella, & I definitely plan to buy a copy in the future!

Was this review helpful?

Fungal horror takes center stage in this reimagining of Poe's The Fall of the House of Usher. I loved the history and culture Kingfisher crested in this story and all the humor woven in amongst the horror. A thoroughly enjoyable read. Be ready for lots of body horror and dead animals.

TW: mentions of suicide, animal dissection, and murder

Was this review helpful?

My favorite T. Kingfisher yet! I really enjoyed The Hollow Places and The Twisted Ones, but this book takes the creepy cake. It's vivid and atmospheric without being overwrought. The mystery is intriguing and the characters compelling. The world-building is interesting but not overdone for a novella. As with the previous two Kingfisher books I read, the main character was compelling and likable. In short, everything about this book was wonderful! This is one of my new favorite horror books and now I'm just sad I devoured this one so quickly, which means I'll have to wait awhile for the next T. Kingfisher. Definitely recommend preordering!

Thank you Tor Nightfire for an advanced electronic copy in exchange for an honest review. All thought are my own.

Was this review helpful?

T. Kingfisher never disappoints! What Moves the Dead is a creepy, gothic horror novella based on "The Fall of the House of Usher." Alex Easton is a former soldier who uses ka/kan pronouns and is visiting the house of Usher to see his childhood friend before she passes away.
Despite this being a novella, the beginning was a little bit slow, but it did pick up quickly and I enjoy Kingfisher's writing so much that I didn't mind it dragging a little. I was unsettled for the entire second half of the book. Plants (or fungus in this case) being sentient is my absolute favorite horror trope, and I think the historical setting really added to the spooky, 'wrong' feeling.

Was this review helpful?

I love T. Kingfisher. Her books are always a wild ride and unputdownable from start to finish, and with such a wide range of horror stories to fantasy she demonstrates a wide range of skills with one thing in common: writing that pulls you in from start to finish.

What Moves The Dead was no exception. The story was fast paced, and she did a great job of setting the characters, world and story. It was a delicious blend of creepy, and I can't wait to see what she writes next.

Was this review helpful?

This was a fantastic book! Even though I’ve never read the original material, I was able to really enjoy What Moves the Dead and all it had to offer. It was so creepy and strange and extremely well-written. And Alex Easton was an amazing main character, so fresh and entertaining and intriguing.

Was this review helpful?

An awesome retelling of Poe's work. Reminded me of Mexican Gothic in a way. Would definitely recommend to a fellow book worm.

Was this review helpful?

This was both truly horrifying and loads of fun. We contain multitudes.

I loved how Kingfisher sent a nod to the Ruritanian Romance, which is criminally underused in my opinion, and in Kingfisher's hands it even managed to be inclusive in a way it hasn't occurred to other authors to be when playing with the history of the world.

The use of a multiple pronoun language was really interesting and added so much to the story.

As for the mushrooms. Well. This is definitely a horror title, but I don't know that I'd call it scary horror. I'm not familiar with the source material (Poe's The Fall of the House of Usher), but I definitely enjoyed/cringed in entertained horror at Kingfisher's handling of it.

Was this review helpful?