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Dead Things Are Closer than They Appear

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A painfully average teen’s life is upended by a magical apocalypse.

High school is hard enough to survive without an apocalypse to navigate.

Sid Spencer has always been the most normal girl in her abnormal hometown, a tourist trap built over one of the fault lines that seal magic away from the world. Meanwhile, all Sid has to deal with is hair-ruining humidity, painful awkwardness, being one of four Asians in town, and her friends dumping her when they start dating each other—just days after one of the most humiliating romantic rejections faced by anyone, ever, in all of history.

Then someone kills one of the Guardians who protect the seal. The earth rips open and unleashes the magic trapped inside. Monsters crawl from the ground, no one can enter or leave, and the man behind it all is roaming the streets with a gang of violent vigilantes. Suddenly, Sid’s life becomes a lot less ordinary. When she finds out her missing brother is involved, she joins the remaining Guardians, desperate to find him and close the fault line for good.

Fighting through hordes of living corpses and uncontrollable growths of forest, Sid and a ragtag crew of would-be heroes are the only thing standing between their town and the end of the world as they know it. Between magic, murderers, and burgeoning crushes, Sid must survive being a perfectly normal girl caught in a perfectly abnormal apocalypse.

Only—how can someone so ordinary make it in such an extraordinary world?

416 pages, Hardcover

First published February 13, 2024

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About the author

Robin Wasley

1 book96 followers
Robin Wasley is a YA fantasy writer with a soft spot for orphans, found families, and funny girls with no special skills who find themselves in extraordinary circumstances. She grew up in a family of adoptees, never truly seeing herself reflected in the books she devoured. As an adult, when she saw an Asian American girl on the cover of a YA book for the first time, she cried.

Robin lives in Boston and works in scientific publishing, but she writes so readers can laugh, cry, and scream “Why are you like this?” Her favorite things are genre-mashes, bubble baths, Cheetos, and pie. When not writing, she enjoys baking and binge-watching entire seasons of TV in a single day.

Her one dream in life is to become best friends with BTS.

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5 stars
258 (37%)
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251 (36%)
3 stars
134 (19%)
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7 (1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 236 reviews
Profile Image for Coco (Semi-Hiatus).
964 reviews85 followers
Read
February 21, 2024
DNF @ 26%

I like the premise but couldn't connect with the writing. Overall, not for me.


***Thank you to NetGalley, Robin Wasley, and Dreamscape Media for graciously sending me the audiobook to review. As always, all thoughts are my own.***
Profile Image for Jessica Webber.
120 reviews46 followers
February 17, 2024
Ok, let me start by stating the obvious. Sid and Brian are ADORABLE! Oh my gosh, they just melt my heart. Honestly, all of the characters were so well developed and left a lasting impression. Sid stole my heart from the beginning though. I will ALWAYS relate to the most socially awkward character in a book.

The story was so entertaining and well written. Magic, zombies, found family, adoption, racial diversity, small town…this book had it all. And the narration was fabulous as well.

Thank you NetGalley and Dreamscape Media for the chance to listen to and review this audiobook.
Profile Image for Billie's Not So Secret Diary.
630 reviews62 followers
February 21, 2024
Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear
by Robin Wasley
YA Horror Fantasy
NetGalley Audio ARC
Dreamscape Media
Pub Date: Feb. 27, 2024
Ages: 14+

Even though Sid Spencer is one of the four Asians in the tourist trap town she lives in, she is the most normal girl there. Then her best friend starts to date the boy Sid liked, another of her best friends, who had rejected her in a humiliating way.

One night, at home, her brother gets a phone call and even though he's acting calm, she can tell he's panicking. Then he leaves. She waits.

The fault line that is under the town opens, unleashing magic and monsters, and a magic barrier won't let anyone in or out. And the only way a fault line can open is if a Guardian allows it, but they are supposed to keep them closed.


This story pulled me right in because the MC was relatable, there were funnies, and the action happened pretty quickly. Most of the characters were introduced slowly, thus giving the reader time to get to know them, but when things started to happen, other characters were thrown into the story and then I couldn't keep them straight. Brian's family was one of them, the girls(?) were tossed into the action, and even though were important, they blended in with the other minor characters so there was a time I had no idea who was who and what made them important.

The plot was great, though I feel more details about the town; its history, along with a deeper dive into the magic's history, would've made this town feel more real. Instead, I felt that there was nothing special about this town other than the fault line, and that wasn't that big of a deal either. And it didn't feel right to me to call it a fault line. I get why, but...

The cat was cool until the end of the story. Even though it was funny, it was a little bit too far-fetched.

The narrator did a good job with the characters' voices and emotions, though when she whispered her voice to portray Sid's 'gift', it was too soft and mumbled.

Speaking of Sid's gift, what most see as a weakness, is a power. Nice twist! But it could have used more descriptions/explanations. It was too muted and readers, especially teenagers, may not understand what it is and how it works. Explaining it sooner would make a better impact. I had no clue what her gift was all about until almost the end of the book, and I had to stop and think if it was reasonable.

The book cover is awesome, the title is catching, but long, and I'm not sure what it has to do with the story.

As an Iowan, I snorted at the jab.

There is violence but it's not too graphic. And while I was going to give this one more star, it lost it because it started to drag on. Fifty fewer pages would've kept that star.

3 Stars
Profile Image for Rachel.
311 reviews
March 1, 2024
Some non-spoilery things about this book:

The number of times I cried was not zero.

It made me laugh a shockingly high number of times for a book that includes zombies.

I would die for Chad.

There was one scene where I didn’t realize I was holding my breath so long, it triggered a headache.

I really, really loved it.
Profile Image for Jennifer.
1,271 reviews45 followers
February 29, 2024
4.5 stars.

I'm not sure how this book managed to be wholly unique but also an amalgamation of literally every YA urban fantasy book ever. The dialog, the characters, the humor, just everything was so fun and I laughed out loud a bunch of times. I loved the snarky MC and I'm so happy with how her story ended. Magic, zombies, a cat named Chad, this book has so much to offer.
Profile Image for USOM.
2,921 reviews275 followers
January 18, 2024
(Disclaimer: I received this book from the publisher. This has not impacted my review which is unbiased and honest.)

So you're telling me this is a magical apocalypse, zombies, and transracial adoptee representation? Did I hear that right? I fell in love with this book before I even started. Days after finishing, I am only fully obsessed. Let's just begin with my favorite aspect: the representation. This book made me feel thoroughly seen in the ways that you can feel like a misplaced jigsaw piece. The person who doesn't fit into the picture. All the ways our family loves us, that we know it's not about blood, but the things that still jump out at us.

I also loved how organic and seamless this representation was. It never felt like a one off detail, it was worked into so many different aspects. I have read these 'end of our world' 'magical reckoning' book featuring marginalized characters which don't feel so thorough and genuine. As if in the face of our eventual demise all these issues, these feelings of wrongness, the prejudice, would just magically be soothed. Not only that we could come together, but also forget these feelings encoded into our memories and relationships.

But let me pivot to the setting and characters. The setting feels like another character. It feels like it comes alive and becomes a force to be reckoned with. Maybe it's the zombies, maybe it's this earth shattering change, but in Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear it takes on a life of its own. Additionally, each of the characters we get to know feel so quirky, so real, so detailed. It was my number one note about how almost immediately you get this so thorough sense of who Sid and her family are. Their nuances, memories, and pieces of love.
Profile Image for Amanda Mercedes.
432 reviews14 followers
February 13, 2024
I absolutely LOVED this book. I’m always intrigued by post apocalyptic books, and this one had a magical realism twist in that things are pretty much as they are now, but there are fault lines that have magic, and there are Guardians of them who have their own powers. When one of the Guardians dies, the fault line cracks open and Magic spreads. Now more people have Magic, but with magic comes greed. Ford is like the governor from the Walking Dead, or really like any of the antagonist, and he will stop at nothing to have all of the Keys to the fault lines and the powers of the guardians. He wants to be the most powerful. Sid is about as average of a teenage girl you can be, but the apocalypse brings her to center stage when her brother goes missing, and she finds herself tied in with a gang of other teens who have powers. And the twist on her power is AWESOME.
In essence, it’s about a group of teens trying to save their town from Magic (being badly used) with Magic, and just finding the humanity in everyone. People change in times of crisis, for the worse or better, and it will really show you who people are.

Thank you TBR and Beyond Tours for an early copy of this incredible book!
Profile Image for Audrey.
1,850 reviews104 followers
March 6, 2024
So. Much. Fun. It's Buffy the Vampire Slayer meets the Walking Dead but with more wild magic in the air. I loved the relationships and how Sid Spencer had to figure out her worth in the world. And, just because she thinks she's the sidekick, it's not necessarily how others view her. Along with the zombies and the bad people, Sid, a transracial adoptee, had to navigate lost friendships, death as well as not feeling like she belongs in a mostly all white town. But most of all, I loved how empathy was ultimately a strength and not a weakness.

I received an arc from the publisher but all opinions are my own.

Staff Pick: 3/24
Profile Image for Emily.
444 reviews918 followers
December 5, 2023
This book is so weird and I absolutely loved it!!
Profile Image for luce (cry baby).
1,524 reviews4,829 followers
Shelved as 'dnf'
February 11, 2024
dnf @ 10%

i didn't think that in 2024 i would come across this type of old-school YA protagonist:
-she's short & unlike other girls has curly hair that cannot be tamed
-she's quirky and a bit of a clutz
-she's got a snarky sense of humor
-she's unpopular

maybe the novel subverts her characterisation along the way or the story ends up demonstrating a certain level of self-awareness but given that i don't feel invested enough in the author's storytelling i don't see myself giving it a chance. the whole premise is just making me think back to authors like Holly Black, Natalie C. Parker, C.L. Herman, Maggie Stiefvater, & co. in short, it's giving 2010s YA. the writing isn't terrible (aside from the humor which...yikes) and maybe young teens who have just gotten into magical realism and or urban fantasy might find this to be a spellbinding read.
Profile Image for Amanda at Bookish Brews.
338 reviews242 followers
Want to read
September 4, 2023
I'm SO excited for this book! I'm told it's just an average Korean girl who has to save the world but full of drama, romance, misfits, magic, and something about zombies?! But mostly I'm excited because the author very intentionally wanted to create a world that felt like her very mixed heritage upbringing, and especially wanted to show the many many different lives Asian Americans can have. I just know how important this is to the author and so I know that heart is going to carry through and I'm so excited to see it!!
Profile Image for ShannonXO.
552 reviews162 followers
February 24, 2024
I went into this completely blind and I was NOT disappointed for a second!

This was so much fun! It was like a more interesting The Walking Dead but with all the unique magic powers of Red Queen and a small tourist town feel. It's heartfelt and thoughtful and just really entertaining. I loved Sid so much. She's so vulnerable but she feels and loves so fiercely while also being so funny. Her voice in the narrative was part of why I enjoyed this so much. It hooked me right away and I couldn't put it down. Will definitely be reading more from this author in future.
February 16, 2024
Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear was an OK book. The writing and storytelling were average, but character development and world building were executed well. The story felt longer than necessary. I really liked the cover, and it along with the blurb did a good job of catching my attention. Unfortunately, this book wasn't anything special and it's not memorable. Thank you to NetGalley for offering this title in their catalog.
Profile Image for Tressa (Wishful Endings).
1,793 reviews191 followers
February 13, 2024
4.5 Stars

DEAD THINGS ARE CLOSER THAN THEY APPEAR is one of those stories where you don't know what to expect and what you find is much more than you were hoping for. It's full of family relationships, by blood but mostly found with an emphasis on adopted, as well as friendships and then more of working relationships (like I have to fight with you but I don't know that I would chose to know you). It's set in a small town with a larger-than-life traumatizing event where basically all hell breaks loose. If you enjoy shows like Stranger Things or with apocalyptic monsters and humans who are equally evil, then this is definitely one to pick up! Plus, there are also some very sweet moments of wisdom, romance, and heart.

I really, really loved these characters! Not to say that I didn't have some frustrations and reservations, because I did, but I felt they were relatable and real. Take Sid for instance. She is not the leading will-cut-down-zombies-without-blinking-an-eye leading lady. She is scared and weak and freaks out. I think most of us when faced with something so unreal would take some time adjusting. I appreciated that she had weaknesses and strengths, which allowed her character to also develop and grow as the story goes. And develop it does. This was the same for almost all of the characters, even fierce and removed Eleni. There's also Brian who holds so much grief inside that it hurts while also building like a bomb, and also carries a fierce protection for his sisters that extends to others. He comes off a bit like the usual bad boy, but as well all the characters in this motley crew, none of them quite fit the usual stereotypes because they're a lot more complex and they change over the course of this story. There is also Angel and Shandy with their relationship that is lightly woven in this story. Sometimes gay relationships are pushed in books with a message that feels forced (as can be with religious or inspirational messages, romance or with anything), but in this story, it felt like a natural part and I appreciated that.

I also want to talk just a bit about the plot itself. It moved at a really good pace. There were several climatic moments that built to the final and most intense one, but there were also some moments of downtime and reconvening. The romantic aspects of this story I also really liked. They didn't feel construed, fell naturally into this story and were sweet. I liked that there was so much creativity and how the author allowed it to unfold with all these different characters. Everything didn't go perfectly and didn't tie up in a perfect bow at the end, which I also appreciated. There was danger, people got hurt and killed, there was heartbreak and evil, but there was also perseverance, sacrifice, friendship, love and joy. All the feels, guys. All the feels.

I also noted a few nuggets of wisdom I highlighted. These aren't all of them in this story, but these are the ones I wanted to share that connected with me right now in my life:

"Sometimes I wonder about empathy," I say then. "Do we always have to feel something ourselves in order to understand someone else?"
She contemplates that. "I think it depends on the person. There's no right way or wrong way. If one assumes all empathy to look the same way, they are therefore expecting everyone to behave the way they do . . . which is not empathetic, is it?: She leans forward, elbows on her knees. "[There are] always going to be people we can't relate to, people we'll never love, people we'll never meet. In those situations, you have the opportunity to see how far your empathy can be stretched."
"Some people suck, though," I mutter.
"Whether someone is worthy of empathy isn't something you need to decide. You do get to decide if it's something you wish to extend to someone. It it'll harm you or not. Caring for yourself and caring for others is a balance."

"People make mistakes, but you know now that you get to choose the person you want to be. It's not a straight path, there are obstacles, and the journey never ends. But you're not alone on the road."

"Every person makes an impact in some way, average or not," I say. "We change one another."

In the end, was it what I wished for? This book surprised me, in a very good way. I loved the motley crew that forms, the lovable characters, all the relationship dynamics as well as the creative, page-turning plot. I'll definitely be looking forward to this author's next release!

Content: Swearing (including s and f-words), crude comments/descriptions, some detailed violence (including people dying by zombies and other humans, as well as some torture), a gay relationship.
Source: I received a complimentary copy from the publisher through TBR and Beyond Tours, which did not require a positive review. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Cassandra Mitchell.
222 reviews89 followers
February 28, 2024
Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear by Robin Wasley
4/5 Stars
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

•••Spoiler free review below•••

Set in a small town located on a fault line, Sid has always known magic was locked below the ground. What she didn’t expect was to be thrown into a magical apocalypse when one of the guardians of the fault line is killed. Tasked with the job of finding her missing brother, she teams up with remaining guardians to close the fault lines, find her brother, and save her town.

I really enjoyed this witty and fun read. Our characters were enjoyable to read about and the ya romance was so sweet! I highly recommend this read for anyone who loves paranormal, zombies, and characters you want to root for.

Read this book if you like:
-small towns with a tourist trap
-quirky main characters
-witty writing
-ya romance
-found family

Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear is out NOW and if it is not already on your tbr, it should be!
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Special thanks to Dreamscape Media for sharing a free copy with me in exchange for my honest opinions.

Review on Instagram
Profile Image for Kera’s Always Reading.
1,753 reviews67 followers
February 11, 2024
This brought me back to old school dystopian ya greatness!!

With incredible characters (a huge focus on our protagonist, Sid - freaking LOVED her), beautiful nontraditional family representation, a fast growing outbreak of magical apocalyptic danger, and so much heart, Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear filled my heart to the brim!

Sid feels painfully average… among her family members AND her ex friends, the friends who stopped talking to her just days after she went out on a limb wearing her heart on her sleeve, only for the limb to break in the most embarrassing moment of her life.

But, Sid lives in a tourist trap town on a fault line where magic simmers just underground, protected by guardians who hold the keys to the seal… and she is in for the greatest adventure of her life when someone kills one of the guardians, releasing the magic and something worse… the undead.

Encountering a group of guardians, Sid joins them to find her brother, who has been secretly mixed up in all of this. And she finds something she never expected… herself!

This was empowering, this was tender, and this was so funny! Multiple times I found myself racked with silent sobs, only to turn around and laugh out loud in the same page. I will read ANYTHING this author writes!!
Profile Image for Anjelika Vayas.
28 reviews
March 7, 2024
Some authors just show up in a retweet from another author being excited about their beautiful book's GORGEOUS cover and you end up digging into the author's info and find the book and immediately preorder it after that without a second thought.
Robin Wasley's enthusiasm was radiant and contagious then, and after experiencing all 400 pages of this book, I can say that there are tremors of it remaining. Aftershocks of zippy bits of magic and elementary school glitter that will never EVER be fully gone.
Not only is the humor and pacing very well done, but I've never read the experience of found family and most of all empathy so well written and woven deep into a story's very core. As a very empathetic person who has always been the chaotic and odd humored side kick for a lot of 'main character' types, left in the side lines and only remembered when actually needed, seeing a character who fully defined that become a force of nature in her own right made me feel like high school me was right here and feeling it all over again, but also understanding and sitting up a bit straighter.
Also, I loved how bad ass the Greek girl was, reminding me of my emerald-eyed kid sister who could bench press twice my weight and is a literal amazonian goddess (can you tell I miss my sister)...and that she helped with the struggles of curly hair, for as a Greek American I still struggle with mine day to day.
If you love found family tropes to the MAX, chaotic humor, awkward teenage shenanigans, and overall magical end of the world apocalypses and teenagers doing their best during those times, AND NO PETS LEFT BEHIND, I highly recommend this book. (also the author is really sweet)
Profile Image for Louisa.
7,927 reviews84 followers
March 7, 2024
This was such a great read, loved the world, loved these characters, and it was a fantastic story!
Profile Image for Kirk.
231 reviews6 followers
February 26, 2024
Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear by Robin Wasley started out strong. I was laughing and having fun but eventually tragedy happened. I believe that the amount of characters overwhelmed the narrator because it started to sound the same to me and personally I got lost. I have listened to and enjoyed other audiobooks with the same narrator, Eunice Wong, so maybe it’s time to get my hearing checked. The cover art is really cool and I probably would have picked it up because of that. I found myself getting emotional at the end of the book. ARC was provided by Dreamscape Media via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Zana.
525 reviews153 followers
February 19, 2024
This started out really strong with such a fun and quirky FMC. The writing was funny and witty. Apocalypse and post-apocalypse stories are right up my alley, so I couldn't say no to this arc.

But after halfway through, it read like a typical superpowered teenagers in a magical apocalypse story. Maybe I've read one too many Marvel comic books about very similar situations, so it didn't grab me as much as it would've if I were a newbie to this specific genre. At times, I even felt like it'd serve better as a comic book run instead of a novel.

What I really loved was the audiobook narrator, Eunice Wong. She really brought it all and was very expressive when it came to emotional dialogue or when the scene called for it. I was really impressed! There was a previous hard sci-fi book she narrated that I wasn't a huge fan of, but she did amazing with this one! Consider me a new fan!

Even though this book didn't work out for me, I'd still love to read more of Robin Wasley's work. We don't really see a lot of transracial adoptee ownvoices, so I'm excited to follow her career.
Profile Image for Starr ❇✌❇.
1,478 reviews147 followers
Shelved as 'abandoned'
February 3, 2024
DNF @ %33

There's nothing inherently bad about this book, and, in fact, I'm sure some people will really.ejoy it- especially younger teens or those who aren't yet avid readers. This book just had a very similar vibe to a lot of other books that also did not move me, and a writing style of sudden explanations and random jokes that is a bit pet peeve of mine. Overall, not a book I'd sway anyone from reading, but not a book I feel like spending time on.
Profile Image for Nay.
69 reviews
March 17, 2024
Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear was an excellent book with immersive writing.

The characters in this book were so well written. They were relatable. They had their strengths and weaknesses. The dialogue between characters felt natural, especially in the ALC. The writing style was perfectly translated into audio. Sid and Brian were so adorable!

The pacing was great, it never felt like it was too slow or too fast. Everything in this story felt natural and unforced. The representation didn’t feel like it was thrown in for the sake of having representation. The romance developed nicely without a rush.

Overall, I loved this. It had an interesting plot with great characters. The narrator was amazing! Thank you NetGalley and Dreamscape Media for the ALC. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Kylee.
52 reviews130 followers
April 2, 2024
This was so much fun! It went in so many unexpected directions, I don't know if I've ever read a book that's such a mash up of genres. Chad the cat is a star and I'm always weak for a tender romantic haircutting scene so this book gets an automatic place on my shelf
June 2, 2024
I couldn't get into the book normally when I read a book the minute, I start reading a book it sucks me in this book didn't suck me in and I had a hard time moving on to the next page.
Profile Image for Michelle.
644 reviews10 followers
February 23, 2024
Just here to say that I might be obsessed with our girl Sid in this book. Her character is so awkward and weird and I loved every minute of it.
And swoon over that awkward slow build between Sid and Brian. They are so painfully cute and sweet.

I really love this found family theme throughout the story. That blood doesn't always connect us together. Sometimes love and going through similar things is enough.

Who knew a book with zombie like things escaping and running rampant would be so sweet and touching.
Profile Image for Robin Wasley.
Author 1 book96 followers
Read
April 8, 2024
Note to Reader:
The cat survives.

*******
Blurbs for Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear

"Loaded with imaginative details, mean fluffy cats, and a heroine you'll have no problem rooting for, Robin Wasley's Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear is the most fun you can have when trying to survive a magical hellscape. If you've ever watched a zombie apocalypse movie and thought, well, I'd just die instantly—read this and feel some hope."
 
—Kendare Blake, #1 New York Times bestselling author of Three Dark Crowns
 
"The best novels make you care about the characters and I loved every single hero, sidekick, and cat in this wildly entertaining romp of a novel. Wickedly funny, but also filled with resonant themes of belonging and finding your place in the world. I didn’t want this book to end!"
 —Axie Oh, New York Times bestselling author of The Girl Who Fell Beneath the Sea and XOXO

"Full of effortless prose and sparkling wit, Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear seamlessly meshes genuine horror and snappy banter to create a nonstop, propulsive read that had me both laughing out loud and gasping in astonishment."
—Kelly Andrew, author of The Whispering Dark
 

"A fun romp full of charm and humor! The magic is in Sid Spencer's voice, proving this heroine is anything but ordinary."


—Trang Thanh Tran, New York Times bestselling author of She Is a Haunting

"The tangled threads of complicated love—romantic, platonic, and familial—weave together riveting action and visceral stakes in this magical exploration of self-discovery. I loved this one!"
—Beth Revis, New York Times bestselling author of Across the Universe
Profile Image for Ash.
428 reviews53 followers
February 13, 2024
One of those slow burn books that grips you by the hand and proceeds to jump off a cliff. You don't see anything coming and it wraps up so nicely w a bow. My favorite character is Chad. Who knew? Lol
Profile Image for Chrissy Paperback Treasures.
146 reviews4 followers
February 15, 2024
Sid is a you adopted Korean girl trying to survive in a small city where people still ask her where she's from, her ex best friend started dating the guy she likes (hence her being an ex bff) and she doesn't really know where she fits in life, except with her brother Matty. Just yesterday that may have seemed like the worst of her worries, until a guardian died. Guardians protect the world from magic and without them it is running rampant, bringing zombies to life and imbuing those around with special powers. Sid's brother is missing, a man with what seems like an entire commando crew behind him is attacking her city and Sid isn't sure who she can trust in her search to find her brother and try to save the city from losing any more guardians than they already have.

I was lucky enough to received an arc of the audiobook of Dead Things are Closer Than They Appear from Netgalley and Simon Teen. Huge thanks because I have been eyeing this book and was going to purchase it anyway but I got to enjoy it in a different format first. Right off the bat the narrator isn't working for me. She sounds just a little too old for the character she is portraying, but I promise you, that does not last. I think it had more to do with the slow pacing in the beginning (hello we have to know where we are and who the relevant characters are before the killing can start!) and not really a fault of the narrator. Eunice Wong did great!

The beginning like in any other fantasy took a minute to get going because we really needed to learn who Sid is as a person before we were able to connect with her and care about her survival. I really enjoyed all the pop culture references throughout the book, especially the ones about K-pop and K-dramas (Goblin is #1 ). Robin Wasley's writing is so palpable there were parts that were so creepy I had literal chills going down my arms.

The action sequences are very well written making it easy to stay in the moment and visualize what is happening. I love a strong female character and Sid is that but she's also more. She is still trying to figure out life while wondering if she will have a life left to live when all is said and done. While the beginning may have been a bit more subdued you can expect an all out adventure once the action begins and characters start dying (yes, people die, so be sure to not get too attached!)

This is probably the most thrilling book I have read since Shatter Me and it makes sense because Dead Things are Closer Than They Appear is basically Shatter Me meets I Am Number 4 but more. My only complaint at this point is that I wish this book was the first in a series and not a stand alone, but Robin and I talked it out and Im just glad it exists and I got the chance to read it. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ stars for this fantastic read. I totally recommend this to anyone who was trying to figure out what Fourth Wing was missing. You will find it here.
Profile Image for Lauren Stoolfire.
4,191 reviews287 followers
September 7, 2024
Dead Things Are Closer Than They Appear by Robin Wasley is easily one of my favorite 2024 releases so far. It's a hidden gem and definitely deserves more attention than it has. I can't recommend it highly enough except to saw I absolutely need to read everything else this author I'll ever write and I definitely wouldn't mind revisiting Wellsie again in the future. If you're a fan of The Raven Cycle by Maggie Stiefvater and found families, I have a feeling that this will be right up your alley too.
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