Tyler is an amnesiac, drifting aimlessly across the country, struggling to regain his lost memories. When he arrives in Geddy’s Moon, a sleepy town in the middle of the Kansas wheat fields, fragments of his past begin to resurface. But as he establishes new relationships in town, and spends time with the local librarian and her son, he finds himself tormented by nightmares that grow more unsettling each night. What horrific events took place before Tyler arrived in Geddy’s Moon? And could he have brought a terrifying – and possibly supernatural – danger along with him? As the pieces of his fractured memory begin to fall into place, he fears that it may already be too late to keep himself, and those he’s begun to care about, safe from a vicious evil.
What reviewers are saying about Geddy’s Moon…
“Geddy’s Moon towers above the rest; a refreshing and thrilling masterpiece.”
— Bloody Good Horror
“This novel is an epic coming-of-age, terror-filled, twisty-turny, edge-of-your-seat, gory, creepy, nostalgic, touching adventure that is on par with the top talents in the genre. It’s one of the best novels I’ve read all year.”
— eReader Perks
“Be sure to have a good block of time when you start because you won’t want to put it down.”
— Thomas O. Hobbs, Author
“Mulhall is making a name for himself and is definitely a writer to look out for in 2013 and beyond.”
— Larissa’s Bookish Life
“This book is so genre bending that even the slightest description of it feels like you’re spoiling something.”
— Blayne Alexander, Podthingy
“Geddy’s Moon is a book unlike any you have read and though the narrative feels familiar, like an old friend whose face has faded in memory over time, but whose voice stays with you and lingers, John Mulhall has stood up and screamed to the rafters and he has done it with a voice ALL his own! A truly new voice has emerged… Horror fans take notice!”
— CK Webb, WebbWeaver Book Reviews
“[John] Mulhall has the best qualities of King and Koontz mixed with his own unique style. A must read for any horror/supernatural fan.”
— The Geekdom of Gore