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Sand
Dec 5, 2025 7:44 AM

Author:Hugh Howey

Sand

A powerful post-apocalyptic thriller from the internationally bestselling author of the Silo trilogy.

The old world is buried. A new one has been forged atop the shifting dunes. Here in this land of howling wind and infernal sand, four siblings find themselves scattered and lost.

Palmer has never been the same since his father walked out twelve years ago. His elder sister, Vic, is trying to run away from the past; his younger brothers, Connor and Rob, are risking their lives to embrace it. His mother, left with nothing but anger, is just trying to forget.

Palmer wants to prove his worth, not only to his family, but to himself. And in the barren, dune-covered landscape of his home, there is only one way to earn respect: sand-diving. Plunging deep below the desert floor in search of relics and scraps of the old world. He is about to embark on the most dangerous dive of his young life, aiming to become the first to discover the rumoured city below.

Deep within the sand lies the key to bringing his family together - and tearing their world apart.

Reviews

Sand immerses you in its grubby post-apocalyptic world … Howey conjures a credible, brutal future.

—— Financial Times

Hugh Howey can really write.

—— SFX

In short, Sand will earn Mr Howey another well-deserved million or more.

—— Daily Sport

This terrifically fresh and well-realised setting provides the background for a richly emotional story about families and communities.

—— Morning Star

Sand shows the success of Howey’s Wool Trilogy was no fluke. This is a superior SF thriller, both slick and gritty.

—— Financial Times

It’s all too easy to get so wrapped up in spaceships that you forget what original sci-fi ideas are like … But it’s the horror quality of the sand-diving that stays with you – described so hauntingly that you can almost taste the grit.

—— Sun

[A] powerful tale of the complicated fragility of family ties…Internationally acclaimed and bestselling author David Vann convincingly conjures up the primeval atmosphere of the wilderness and the depth of the hunting instinct. The spirit of the Old Testament is never very far from his prose, and the story of Cain and Abel hovers over the boy’s sense of right and wrong. Tense and unsettling stuff, difficult to put down and disturbingly memorable.

—— Daily Mail

This is a coming of age story as old as Goat Mountain itself and Vann’s descriptions of the Northern Californian landscape are beautiful and meticulously drawn... Vann’s prose has real pace and momentum and drama so intense that this reader often gasped out loud at the horror presented... This is a triumph of a novel. Please read it.

—— Bookmunch

Vann’s writing is highly descriptive…a gripping read

—— Irish Examiner

The author has constructed a wide beautiful splendid vista tainted by a stream of flowing hot red blood with great sentences with a visceral and fluid prose ... David Vann has a prose and voice that the reader may know of, this novel comes to finalise in his dealings with death, loss, and sacrifice, this story marks a great point in his writing’s timeline. One cannot help but feel excited and expectantly wait upon his next novel, on what road he shall traverse and what characters he shall craft with great skill.

—— More2read

Vann’s writing is thoughtful and profound.

—— Bibliojunkie

There's no doubt that this is a deeply disturbing and violent book — there's one particular scene involving a wounded buck that is stomach-churning — but this is a powerful read that deals with important subjects, not least at what point should a child take responsibility for his actions. It ruminates on the sanctity of life, the sins of the father, the rules (or ethics) of hunting, human guilt and remorse, crime and punishment….[It will] appeal to those who like dark suspenseful tales about moral culpability.

—— Reading Matters

It’s an extraordinary achievement and a riveting work of prose

—— The Herald

Illuminated by a clear and insightful knowledge of what it means to be human... Petterson is really a masterful depictor of contemporary life

—— Nordjyske, Denmark

I Refuse is, despite its apparent realism, a nearly magical literary experience... It simply does not get much better than this

—— Ekstra Bladet, Denmark

Petterson confirms his reputation as Scandinavia's leading realist writer...the heart-rending contrast between power and powerlessness, silence and speech is anchored in every word in these pages. And in the reader’s soul

—— Kristeligt Dagblad, Denmark

A masterpiece...at least as good as Out Stealing Horses... Intimate, shocking, demanding, raw

—— Morgenbladet, Norway

Norwegian literature's clearest shining star...a masterful novel about friendship, violence and destruction

—— Information, Denmark

A moving, complex short novel that is richer and more satisfying than most books several times its length

—— Daragh Reddin , Metro Herald

The suspense isn’t in the plot but the prose, with its extraordinary looping sentences

—— Blake Morrison , Guardian Weekly

A harrowing account of childhood, of friendship, and of family disruption… Precise, scrupulous and emotionally intense… Peterson is a skilled storyteller… An admirable and honest novel.

—— Eibhear Walshe , Irish Examiner

With an enchanting, poetic language Rachel Joyce writes about the fundamental questions of life and death.

—— 52buecher, Germany

Like Harold Fry, Queenie is delightful and dark. Death, duty and regret shadow nearly every page, but the darkness is not unrelenting; there is humor, and there is light.

—— Minneapolis Star Tribune

This lovely book is full of joy. Much more than the story of a woman’s enduring love for an ordinary, flawed man, it’s an ode to messy, imperfect, glorious, unsung humanity ... Her love song is for us. Thank you, Rachel Joyce.

—— Washington Post

[A] deeply affecting novel…Culminating in a shattering revelation, her tale is funny, sad, hopeful: She’s bound for death, but full of life.

—— People Magazine

A moving, lyrical read about life, love and saying goodbye. this is a companion story to the similarly entrancing The Unlikely Pilgrimage of Harold Fry, but could be read alone.

—— Cathy Rentzenbrink , Prima
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