Thirteen Storeys by Jonathan Sims, 390 pages.
A dinner party is held in the Penthouse of Banyan Court. A dinner party that ends in the spectacularly violent and unsolved murder of billionaire Tobias Fell, owner and constructor of the building. The guests have no connections, except that they are all tied to the building itself, whether that means residents of the poor side of the building, residents of the rich side of the building, or employees. The one thing they do have in common are disturbing paranormal encounters in Banyan Court.
Jonathan Sims, writer of this book, is also the creator of The Magnus Archives podcast, and anthology of horror stories that builds into something larger and vastly interconnected. Fans of that will definitely also be fans of this, which does something very similar. I didn't find most of these stories particularly scary, but they were varied enough that I think there's at least one story in the thirteen that's likely to get to anyone. It was also a real pleasure to watch all of the stories begin to click together, and by the time I was halfway through I could definitely identify characters on the periphery that appeared in previous stories. Towards the end of the book I actually went back and flipped through the earlier stories to try to figure out some of the things that were clearly references to other things going on that I hadn't understood at the time.
I have mixed feelings about the ending. On the one hand I appreciate it's neatness and clarity of purpose. On the other hand I had sort of been hoping for something weirder. Still, this book is very thematically compelling and felt almost like a fun puzzle to read. It's engaging, but not difficult, and I would definitely recommend it.
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