News

December 7, 2021

FACE THE NIGHT reviewed by BookLife

Face the Night reviewed by BookLife

Publisher Weekly’s BookLife reviewed Face the Night today! And it was very positive.

In addition to the full written review, BookLife also grades various elements, such as cover design, typography, editing, and marketing materials. We’re happy to report Face the Night scored straight A’s across the board.

“Suspenseful… shocking… engaging small-town thriller. Great for fans of Stephen Graham Jones’s My Heart Is a Chainsaw.”

Lastufka’s debut introduces Adriana, a talented artist and young, single mom who finds herself in a custody battle with her father for her son, Dylan. When Adriana wins temporary custody that’s dependent on gainful employment, she manages to convince the police chief of Cellar, Ohio, to bring her on board with the department as a sketch artist and administrative assistant. Unfortunately for Adriana, her new job and the fight for her child resurfaces a recurring nightmare from her past. As she connects with her neighbors—and the newest police officer on the force—she increasingly begins to wonder if her nightmare is a reminder of a heinous crime long buried and forgotten.

Adriana is a classic heroine, fighting for a better life for herself and her son, while her ex is a stereotypical deadbeat dad and drug user; Lastufka’s characters are consistent, but some tend toward the one dimensional. Her father, Bradley, adeptly plays the role of a corrupt, scheming mayor, and Matt Hinkley is the eager, straight-as-an-arrow cop who’s ready to swoop in and save the day for Adriana, even if it means bending the rules.

Still, the plot, in which danger from the past and the present threatens Adriana and her son as she’s trying to rebuild, will stir anticipation in readers of thrillers, although one of the story’s biggest surprises is how much information gets revealed early rather than teased out. The shocking incidents that transpire in and around the community of Cellar during a contentious mayoral race—one that Adriana’s father is determined not to lose, at any cost— reach a fever pitch with a terrible act of violence. Meanwhile, the increasing intensity of Adriana’s nightmares leaves her determined to uncover the memories she believes she’s repressed, putting her and her new friends in danger from those who would prefer the past stay buried. The cast might be familiar, but Lastufka’s storytelling keeps Face the Night suspenseful.

Takeaway: A single mother faces danger from the past and present in this engaging small-town thriller.

Great for fans of: Alex North, Stephen Graham Jones’s My Heart Is a Chainsaw.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: A
Marketing copy: A

Related Titles
🏆 Bestseller
🥇 Award Winner
★ Starred Review
More News
June 4, 2025
This week we sold our 40,000th book! Just over a year ago, we celebrated selling 10,000 total books on March 28th, 2024. It took us two years to sell 10,000 books. Just over a year later, we quadrupled that number…
May 21, 2025
Introducing Shortwave’s line of eBook Box Sets! While we love physical books, we acknowledge their costs and limitations. Omnibuses that reach well past 1,000 pages are not practical to print, or to price well for most readers…
May 19, 2025
When We Were Brutal, a new novella by Gwendolyn Kiste and part of our Killer VHS Series, is coming in 2027…
May 15, 2025
Rest Stop is a Next Generation IBA Finalist for Best New Horror. Even more impressive, this isn’t a novella category…
April 30, 2025
Today we are excited to announce a new deal for Crossroads, a novella by Laurel Hightower in which a mother discovers just how far she’d go to bring back someone she loves.
April 10, 2025
We are excited to announce Nat Cassidy’s Rest Stop and Joshua Millican’s Teleportasm are both nominated for Novella of the Year at the This Is Horror Awards.
April 7, 2025
For reviewers who use NetGalley, we have two of the Amid the Vastness of All Else saga titles available for review now!