![]() ![]() He develops a chilling atmosphere and social dynamic within the walls of the Kavach, and I absolutely devoured the first half of the book. Early in his stay, Nate notices some curious features of the old building: all the units have different dimensions the plumbing is an inefficient web of pipes there are discolored lights green, mutant cockroaches and, best of all, certain apartments are padlocked shut. The setting for this quasi-Lovecraftian, quasi-apocalyptic story is the Kavach building, which seems odd even by L.A. So it goes in 14, by Peter Clines, in which an apathetic data-entry temp (Nate) is referred to a cheap apartment, where rents are suspiciously low, utilities shockingly free and the neighbors… well, the ones who stick around are… interesting. If someone introduces you to an opportunity too good, and too convenient, to be true, you definitely should take it because you are guaranteed adventure-most likely one shadowed with conspiracy and gore. ![]() If someone introduces you to an opportunity too good, and too convenient, to be true, you probably shouldn’t take it because it can only mean trouble. ![]() If I’ve learned anything from my lifelong obsession with horror, it’s that: ![]()
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