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Send me to space with S.A. Barnes and I can promise you I will be excitedly terrified at what we'll encounter.

S.A. Barnes combined two of my biggest fears: space and the progression of AI. I've never thought about what you'd do with your dead if civilization was in space, and it was a fun premise to explore, especially when you mix in human greed and emotions. While we're trying to unravel two mysteries, I felt like neither of those plots got lost and were both wrapped up in a satisfying way.

The horror elements as she adventures further and further into the ship got me. Barnes does a phenomenal job at creeping you out. If this were made into a movie or TV show, I have a feeling not many people would be sleeping after watching it.

While it would've been easy to fall down an unreliable narrator path, I'm so happy that's not where we went. Yes, Halley is stressed. She's running from scandal and on a ship that is more than she bargained for, but it never felt like we leaned in too far to either aspect being the reasons for what she's seeing.

S.A. Barnes is an autobuy author for me and I cannot wait to see what she does next. I hope it's just as creepy and disturbing as Cold Eternity was.

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This just... didn't work for me as much as Barnes' previous two books have. I spent most of my time bored - there needed to be more creepiness, more lead up to the reveal. There was just something missing from it, I just never got drawn into the setting like I did in her previous books. If she had focused more on the "horror" aspect of the problem the protagonist is facing in the moment, rather than the more mundane problems of "the past I'm running from" I think this would have worked a lot better.

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After having read every one of this author’s releases I do think it’s a bit funny that they keep writing the same kind of scruffy, on the run type of heroines but I also will continue to read every release despite this repetitiveness. Sadly the genre of space horror is grossly underutilized in Sci-Fi and I really do love that S.A. Barnes is sticking to this niche.

That being said, this is the closest book I’ve read to resemble the 2009 film Pandorum that was a hit only to me. The idea of a ship full of passengers hundreds of years old that suspiciously start waking up and a grotesque monster hunting people is so similar to Pandorum. And I kind of love this book for that.

Thank you to the publisher Macmillan Audio for providing an audiobook ARC for honest review view NetGalley.

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S.A. Barnes writes it, I read it. Simple as that. She has proven herself to be the Queen of Space Horror and us lovers of the sub-genre appreciate her greatly. I've been chasing the high the movie Alien (1979) left me since I watched it, and Barnes truly is the first author to sate my spooky space-loving soul. I can only hope she keeps cranking them out so fast.

Let me preface this by saying I love all of Barne's books. Cold Eternity didn't top Dead Silence for me, but it was a close second. It was creepy, tense, atmospheric, mysterious, and wrapped up in a satisfying way. The way isolation played into this story was truly top tier. I've noticed that these books truly shine in audio format and I always recommend horror audiobook fans to pick these up. Narrator was fantastic and I had no issue following along at 2x speed. Absolutely recommend!

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This one was a bit slow to get into, but once the suspense really started and the mysteries began to unravel, it became very engaging straight through to the end. The narrator did a good job of keeping me engaged and I was overall very pleased with this audiobook!

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Y'all I always thought I was a scaredy cat and couldn't read books classified as horror, but I LOVE sci-fi horror!

I was constantly on the edge of my seat wanting to know what was coming next. The mystery and suspense had me gripped. The vibes were eerie, creepy, and spine tingling.

SA Barnes makes me want to step out of my comfort zone more and more often.

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I thought the balance of sci-fi, and horror was good and the premise was very interesting. Anyone looking for a spooky sci-fi read I would recommend this book. Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an e-book in exchange for an honest review.

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SA Barnes does it again! Space horror was never on my radar before this author, but now I am so hooked. This books was creepy and intriguing and just so good! I couldn’t stop listening. I will be recommending this to every horror and sci-fi reader I come across!

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Cold Eternity by S A Barnes

Halley is on the run and finding a job on a ship with a cryo program seems like the ideal place to hide… Things aren’t what they seem. The hologram hosts are glitching… They don’t act like a computer program. Halley can feel something isn’t right here and what is slithering around the vents…

It started out slow… I was a tad bored at first… Once Halley is on that ship.. GAME ON! It felt like coming online and you could feel the tension.

I actually really enjoyed it. I am very specific about my sci-fi and this one was exceptional! The narration was excellent and I enjoyed the heck out of it.

The plot was insane! I was totally grossed out and engrossed in equal measures. It felt like a warning too… It was excellent.

4.5 stars

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S.A. Barnes is an autobuy author for me. I love the creepy, atmospheric stories she builds and Cold Eternity is no exception. Halley is on the run from a political scandal and takes a shady job on a storage barge to lay low. Oh but the “storage barge” stores cryogenically frozen bodies, and she starts seeing things and hearing noises scratching in the vents almost immediately. Has Halley run from a scandal into something much worse?


An almost empty of the living space barge is the perfect setting for a horror story. The audiobook really ratchets up the tension, and you’ll feel like you’re creeping around the ship with Halley. Listening at night is not recommended.


Cold Eternity is the perfect book for people looking to break into the scifi world. There’s political intrigue (though this plot line does take a back seat to the things going bump in the night), a bit of space travel, and some interesting technology. However, it’s not over complicated in the way the genre can sometimes be.


If you’re a horror lover and a scifi fan, I highly recommend picking this one up. Thank you to Netgalley and Macmillan Audio for my copy!

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Solid sci-fi horror. The first half is reminiscence of "The Shinning" in space. Halley starts a new job as a care takers of an isolated spaceship, Elysian Fields, that holds those cryogenicly frozen about 200 years ago. With her only companion as the hologram narrator of the prior museum the ship once hosted. As strange thingbstart to happen is. She questions if it's her lack of sleep or of something more sinister is happening. The second half is like another popular sci-fi horror but will not say as it will give too much away.

Thank you to NetGalley and MacMillan Audio for an advanced audiobook for review.

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There is something so creepy about SciFi and Horror blended together! Especially when you’re on an abandoned ship with “passengers” long in crypto-sleep, but then you hear noises and the ship’s AI k owns your true name…..

This was a thrilling and creepy scifi horror story! I still love Dead Silence by SA Barnes the best, but Cold Eternity is still an excellent novel. The narration is excellent and very easy to follow. Highly recommend for all scifi and horror readers!

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While I didn’t enjoy this as much as the author’s previous two books, it was still an entertaining locked-room space horror. The first half was quite slow, but fortunately, things picked up in the second half. The main character could be frustrating at times, though I understood her motivations. There was also a weird romance subplot I definitely wasn’t expecting, but I didn’t entirely hate it either. That said, some parts of the story were predictable and I didn’t always find the central plot compelling. Still, despite my issues, it was an engaging read overall.

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I think this was a great addition after the sophomore slump of Ghost Station. This is a book that made major improvements from her second book. It had the same space elements that S. A. Barnes is quickly perfecting, and misses the pitfalls of potentially being repetitive. It is great and atmospheric, spooky, and continues to touch on social class in space horror. As with her previous books there is an element of an unreliable narrator, but I think that it was combined with the AI "character" that worked as a really good foil. This book has reignited my love for S. A. Barnes' work!

I liked the narrator of this one!

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Halley is on the run and broke. Beaten and robbed, she needs off the space station she is currently on and a concerning job offer may be only choice. When she lands on the giant space barge, Elysian Fields, holding the cryogenically frozen bodies of those who could be brought back one day when technology allows, she is greeted by a cranky caretaker and a creepy old ship. Determined to make the best of it, she hunkers down and does her relentlessly boring, sleep depriving job until the little mysteries start spiraling into a mess she can't ignore.
I love S.A. Barnes creepy space thrillers- and this was another great one. Slowly building the tension, as Halley wanders through the ship, becoming familiar with her new home, ruminating on her past, Barnes layered Halley's past and present together wonderfully.
With some excellent twists and turns and a delightfully exciting climax, I can't recommend it enough!



Thank you to Tor Nightfire and NetGalley who provided me with a copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.

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Thanks to NetGalley, Macmillan Audio, and Tor Nightfire for the audiobook arc.

Halley, a young woman on the run, takes a job off a sketchy forum. The offer is for far below the established minimum wage, which will force her to work for longer just to scrape up enough for passage somewhere, but at least it’s on a ship that’s so unlikely to be visited that it’s almost a home run. And where her boss is unlikely to come face to face with her, and the people that may or may not be after her are unlikely to find her, there’s no way she can refuse.

The job seems easy, patrol the corridors, keep things need, clean, functional, and press a single button every three hours—every three on the dot. If she doesn’t, a warning alarm will go off and her boss’s superiors may visit to see why HE wasn’t pressing the button. She’s to remain a complete secret. You can sleep for two hours and fifty minutes every three hours, but you’ll never sleep through the night. I guess I didn’t really think about it while reading, but could you imagine the pressure of that? It would start as an annoyance, maybe a small headache or pain behind the eyes, then over time it would change into irritability, outright anger, paranoia—perhaps hallucinations? That sort of aching, growing atmosphere in the background was almost like The Shining to me. Creeping-insanity-esque.

Outside of atmosphere, I really liked how quickly this one got off the ground. Halley’s past is left unresolved enough to be intriguing and her immediate scare on the new ship draws the reader right in. The AI projections are startlingly creepy at times, and although I wouldn’t liken them to M3gan (especially as they aren’t solid) it was a somewhat unique and futuristic addition to the book. I also enjoyed that they were not just thrown in, their inclusion is tied directly to the story.

As for the twist, which I will not ruin, it worked for me. It was eerie and unique and ultimately paid off in a way I found more enjoyable than Ghost Station. I did feel like it could have gone on for a tad longer, but that’s okay. In a story that felt like a creepy haunting or even creature story, the landing was a bit different.

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Cold Eternity is my favorite S.A Barnes so far! I loved the desolate, run down, remote setting of Elysian Fields (a giant ship housing an old cryo program. AKA filled with “dead” bodies). I think this story worked so well for me because of our MC, Halley. She is on the run after a political scandal and for the most part ALL OF HER DECISIONS MAKE SENSE! Even if I didn’t agree with her, I understood why she was making these decisions. That goes a long way for me because one of my least favorite things is dumb characters making the worst decisions ever. This setting is isolated with Halley mostly only communicating with herself, so if she hadn’t worked for me this book wouldn’t have worked for me. This is a slow burn story for the most part, but I felt we had some seriously creepy things and bits of information that kept up the intrigue and made the action at the end even more worth it! Also, the audiobook narrator did a great job making everything sound even creepier as you could feel the emotions of our MC in her voice. I definitely recommend this one if you like space horror!

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This was my first S.A. Barnes book—and it won’t be my last. If you like space horror that’s creepy, emotional, and a little bit brutal, this is one you shouldn’t miss. Halley is a runaway, hiding on a giant abandoned space barge full of frozen bodies and glitchy AI hosts. But this isn’t just a survival story; it’s about greed, loneliness, and what happens when rich people’s bad choices haunt everyone else.

I don’t usually love space horror, but Halley completely hooked me. She’s tough, resourceful, and broken in all the ways that make you root for her even harder. I’m a total sucker for a female underdog, and Halley made me want to stand up and cheer. And the *"we can never be together"* romance thread? Gut-wrenching in the best way.

The audiobook made the whole experience even better. The narration was searingly immersive—the narrator pulled me right into Halley’s mind with raw emotion. I could almost feel the background noises—the scraping, rattling, and slithering in the vents—so eerie. A few moments even made me jump, which doesn’t happen often. It wasn’t just atmospheric horror—it had real scares, vivid imagery, and a steady undercurrent of dread that stayed with me.

There’s blood, gore, abandonment themes, and heartbreak. The horror is quiet. But there’s also fierce survival, hope, and a badass woman refusing to give up even when the world (or the galaxy) is stacked against her. The ending worked really well too. It didn't feel rushed, and I could totally picture this on the silver screen. If you want a book that feels like an icy injection straight into your veins—with action, horror, heart, and unforgettable characters—Cold Eternity will serve it up.

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Hey, let's go to outer space! That'd be fun, right?!
No, you lunatic. Space is the setting for horror in space. Such as here.

Your main character is trying to hide out from authorities due to her activism so she takes a cush if boring job hauling cryogenic bodies.

How scary could that be? They're dead, right?

RIGHT?! 😰

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Sci-fi horror with AI and body snatching. I liked the gruesome monster and the AI mystery here as well as the sterile atmosphere. The backstory was intriguing and the narrative came together well. One of the better from Barnes in my opinion.

Thank you to NetGalley and the publisher for my copy. These opinions are my own.

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