Discover millions of ebooks, audiobooks, and so much more with a free trial

Only $11.99/month after trial. Cancel anytime.

Bird Box: A Novel
Bird Box: A Novel
Bird Box: A Novel
Ebook310 pages4 hours

Bird Box: A Novel

Rating: 4 out of 5 stars

4/5

()

Read preview

About this ebook

“A book that demands to be read in a single sitting, and through the cracks between one’s fingers. There has never been a horror story quite like this. Josh Malerman truly delivers.” — Hugh Howey, New York Times bestselling author of Wool

Written with the narrative tension of The Road and the exquisite terror of classic Stephen King, Bird Box is a propulsive, edge-of-your-seat horror thriller, set in an apocalyptic near-future world—a masterpiece of suspense from the brilliantly imaginative Josh Malerman.

Something is out there . . .

Something terrifying that must not be seen. One glimpse and a person is driven to deadly violence. No one knows what it is or where it came from.

Five years after it began, a handful of scattered survivors remain, including Malorie and her two young children. Living in an abandoned house near the river, she has dreamed of fleeing to a place where they might be safe. Now, that the boy and girl are four, it is time to go. But the journey ahead will be terrifying: twenty miles downriver in a rowboat—blindfolded—with nothing to rely on but her wits and the children’s trained ears. One wrong choice and they will die. And something is following them. But is it man, animal, or monster?

Engulfed in darkness, surrounded by sounds both familiar and frightening, Malorie embarks on a harrowing odyssey—a trip that takes her into an unseen world and back into the past, to the companions who once saved her. Under the guidance of the stalwart Tom, a motely group of strangers banded together against the unseen terror, creating order from the chaos. But when supplies ran low, they were forced to venture outside—and confront the ultimate question: in a world gone mad, who can really be trusted?

Interweaving past and present, Malerman’s breathtaking debut is a horrific and gripping snapshot of a world unraveled that will have you racing to the final page.

Editor's Note

Don’t look…

Instead of walking around blindfolded for the “Bird Box” challenge, read the original novel. Josh Malerman’s chilling, apocalyptic debut has been favorably compared to the likes of Stephen King. It’s no wonder the Netflix adaptation starring Sandra Bullock became such a craze.

LanguageEnglish
PublisherHarperCollins
Release dateMay 13, 2014
ISBN9780062259677
Author

Josh Malerman

Josh Malerman’s literary output began as a young child as he wrote about a space-travelling dog. During his many years spent as lead singer and guitarist for band The High Strung, Josh never stopped writing, until one day, the drafts began to form chilling debut Bird Box, published in 2015. Josh lives in Michigan and tweets at @JoshMalerman.

Read more from Josh Malerman

Related authors

Related to Bird Box

Related ebooks

Related articles

Reviews for Bird Box

Rating: 3.9985608094991365 out of 5 stars
4/5

1,737 ratings138 reviews

What did you think?

Tap to rate

Review must be at least 10 words

  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I decided to read the book before watching the new Netflix movie sometime in the next few weeks.I think this book suffered by jumping back and forth between two tracks. Track A is a post-apocalyptic future where a woman struggles to transport two young children from one refuge to another. Track B is set four or five years previous as the apocalypse begins to unfold and the woman seeks refuge with a group of strangers. Everything about Track A basically tells us that Track B is not going to end well, but we spend much of the book waiting to find out how. When it finally comes, it is fairly exciting, if way over the top. Having wrapped up Track B, the rest of the book is spent in Track A and seems anticlimactic if not outright pointless.Side note: I found it amusing that I was willing to suspend disbelief about a vaguely described alien invasion, but it constantly threw me out of the story that the woman only refers to the children as Boy and Girl. Very bad choice.So, slow beginning, decent middle, muddled ending, but still entertaining enough. Now bring on Bullock!

    1 person found this helpful

  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    From goodreads
    Most people ignored the outrageous reports on the news. But they became too frequent, they became too real. And soon, they began happening down the street. Then the Internet died. The television and radio went silent. The phones stopped ringing. And we couldn't look outside anymore. Malorie raises the children the only way she can; indoors. The house is quiet. The doors are locked, the curtains are closed, mattresses are nailed over the windows. They are out there. She might let them in. The children sleep in the bedroom across the hall. Soon she will have to wake them. Soon she will have to blindfold them. Today they must leave the house. Today they will risk everything.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    The post-apocalypse genre saturates so much of pop culture these days that I try my best to avoid it whenever I can. Color me surprised when I picked up Josh Malerman’s Bird Box, expecting more of the same, and discovered that post-apocalyptic novels are not quite dead yet. Malerman’s debut tells the story of Malorie, Boy, and Girl, an unconventional family living in a world where using one’s sight has become dangerous, and too often leads to horrific acts of violence, murder, and eventually, suicide. The novel shifts between past and present, providing glimpses into Malorie’s life before and after the world started to unravel.

    Malerman provides just the right amount of background information to compel the reader from the very start. He also withholds information brilliantly, as he establishes the haunting atmosphere, pulls you into the mystery behind the sudden acts of violence, and then leaves you wondering who or what could be causing so much chaos and death. The time shifts are also written in such a way that the reader is aware of an absence or is wary of a character, but they don’t yet know why. Putting the pieces together will become a desperate need, but Malerman only gives out information when he feels it is the right time. The anticipation is a killer.

    Malorie desperately attempts to bond to her children in the present and her housemates in the past, but struggles immensely, as she has already lost so much and cannot fathom more death and isolation. While her thoughts dominate much of the narrative, important deviations to the minds of the other members of the household emphasize their similarities and differences. Everyone in the house has seen terrible things and they all have a common motivation, but they want to approach the solution in different ways. This tension and distrust causes much of the conflict in the house, and often makes the reader wonder whether living in the house is as safe as everyone seems to think.

    What makes Bird Box so unique is that it relies heavily on the reader’s imagination. The people in the house must use blindfolds whenever they venture outdoors to fetch water or to make a supply run. Hearing, touch, and smell become imperative to their survival, and when strange objects, sounds, or odors appear, the mind jumps to the worst conclusions. Large portions of the novel focus on journeys outdoors, and these sections are the most nerve-wracking of all. Nobody knows what lurks around the corner, and most of the time, they will never find out.

    Such a fast-paced and unpredictable novel begs for a marathon read. Bird Box by Josh Malerman will make you question your sanity and redefine your sense of humanity. It may also give you nightmares for weeks to come. In other words, it’s the perfect Halloween read.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Spoilers: A horror/post-apocalypse hybrid and the author's first novel, intensely creepy and an absolute page-turner in the best sense of the word. The underlying phenomenon is never explained as it would be if it were Science Fiction, but it's grounded by a hugely sympathetic progagonist. It alternates between real time and flashbacks, and during the parts of the book that take place outside with the characters blindfolded, it becomes almost hallucinatory, with the author having to describe things without visual imagery. There's only one really hardcore shock, but it's as doozy. Doesn't read like somebody's first book, it's very sure-handed, fully realized and well written. The Special Edition includes a short story set in the same world, turning the concept inside out by getting into the head of an actual victim. A great read, whichever genre you're a fan of.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    The author is a master at tension building, which made this a very hard to put down book.I read it in two sittings and never got bored with it once.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    As it says on the cover, "Don't Open Your Eyes"! And you damn well better listen!I really liked the movie, and this book, as per usual, is better! It's much more realistic, and gets in to more survival details and makes the whole story a little more believable. Malorie is awesome, and Boy and Girl are pretty kickin' too! If you like the movie, you'll like this read. And if you haven't seen the movie, read this first!
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I loved this book. So well-written, riveting, and completely terrifying. I still have questions and would love a sequel.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I’m still reeling from this one. The suspense is so intense. I will say that reading this while pregnant added an extra layer of stress! It’s well written and there were so many white-knuckle moments. It’s terrifying without being too graphic, which is good.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book was super grim. I read it right before watching the movie. While I do think it is better than the film version (Netflix), I found the primary motivation for taking the journey to be stronger in the film than the book.That “journey” is a majority of the plot - it bounces back and forth between present-day, with a blindfolded journey down a river, and five years past, when we learn WHY everyone is blindfolded in this book. It was dark and ominous. This book didn’t make me afraid, per se, but I did lay awake for some time after I finished it just feeling the intense after-effects of the book.
  • Rating: 2 out of 5 stars
    2/5
    I finally watched the movie the other night. It being 2019, a random non-prime year, I'm trying to be less of a curmudgeon (not a resolution, but it does takes resolve...) so I'll just say...I watched the movie. Given some of the logical inconsistencies within the oh-so-required suspension-of-thought (when I did observe something out loud, my wife asked, "Can't you just be in the moment?" We've been married almost 33 years. She knows I can't - brain sees problems, brain asks questions. The task is to only ask them internally.) I wondered the adaptation failed or the source matter did. So I read the book.Problems first: I am not a fan of present tense writing. oddly, Malerman used that style for both his "current" segments and flashbacks, where I would expect perhaps...past tense?This is probably the most absurd premise ever conceived. This might be forgivable, but if there are some people not affected in the way of all but a millionth of a percent (speculation on my part) of all people, how is it that there aren't some not affected at all, instead of being affected in a logically inconsistent way? That might be forgiveable because maybe the incredibly small sample set (of characters) never come across any who are immune.As for positives: It's a quick read. And it's really simple. Really simple. Flat, undeveloped characters. Alternating (for the most part) time slices. Small slices - non-linearity serves it well. Because it is simple, other than that premise, there is no thinking necessary. Now, it is engaging. Maybe that simplicity...Malerman leaves a lot unanswered - why the names of the children (unlike the movie, there is only one reference in the book to indicate the lead character's reason), the creatures...how an entire world can be infested in an incongruously short period of time, and the mechanism of the Effect...the absurdity is something that cannot be ignored by any reader with reasoning ability.I find it amusing that this is classified as "horror" - how it won awards is baffling. If Malerman had spent time developing the feeling, it might, but as it reads, it fits the "Odd" category and not "Horror". And I don't think it is me (I've not been frightened from a fiction book since I was eight and read a collection of ghost stories) - it really falls short. So, the source matter is the ...source...of the problem, but the adaptation at least improved it. One of those statistical anomalies of a movie being better than a book.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Set in a ravaged landscape, a woman must lead herself and two children down a river to safety ... while blindfolded. This implausible setup becomes the setup for a page-turning thriller. Malerie and her two young charges are the only ones still alive after some malignant force is causing everyone to kill each other --and themselves-- upon sight. The only defense, it seems, is to not see 'the creature/s'. It's a mashup of Once Upon a River (Campbell) and The Road (McCarthy). While it pales in comparison to both, BB is still a pretty good ride. If the goal of the author was to cause this reader some sleepless nights, he succeeded!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    This is a great book. It put you in the verge and it makes you imagine something different each time. I really like the ending, was quite unexpected. Is a perfect reading for october... Rainy day when you are not sure what is out....
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    ‘They are monsters, Malorie thinks. But she knows they are more than this. They are infinity.’Bird Box is about an unseen horror that slowly consumes the world. Starting in Russia, news begins pouring in about people going mad and attacking people before turning the violence on themselves. The only correlation between each event is that these people saw something before completely losing their minds.The story alternates between past and present and does an amazing job at building up the intensity levels to the point where you think it can’t possibly get more extreme. But it does. And continues to do so until the final pages. We’re first introduced to Malorie who has recently found out she’s pregnant. She lives with her sister who is obsessed with watching the news and reading up on the attacks in Russia. The attacks begin spreading and soon enough they’re hearing of incidents in Alaska and eventually in their own town. The only hope for salvation is by keeping their eyes closed. Always. The story then switches to the future, where Malorie and her two four-year old children have managed to survive but are attempting to traverse a river blind in order to get the help they need. Meanwhile, she is certain they are being followed but not being able to see their pursuer keeps them in constant darkness.Bird Box is the epitome of suspense. It’s a truly terrifying and unsettling thing to not be able to see, especially when you know you’re forever being watched by something. Something that could cause you to lose your mind with even the briefest glance. These characters are forced to blind themselves in order to adapt to this new post-apocalyptic type world and the portrayal of this forced handicap is extraordinarily done as the reader is also blind to the unknown. Imaginations will run rampant with a host of terrifying possibilities as to what lies just beyond your blindfold. Bird Box is the perfect novel for fans of horror and psychological thrillers, but many will likely have issue with the ambiguous ending.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    You can't look outside, you have to keep the blindfolds over your eyes. If you don't you will go mad and die. This is the life Malorie knows now, follow these rules and she and her children will be safe. I sometime struggle with books set in times after a disaster of some sort whether it's the bomb, plague, or the unkown. This book intrigued me after seeing the trailer for the film version. I have to say that I quite enjoyed it.The story follows Malorie before the problem, during the early part and four years later. I found the story very easy to read and fled through it. For me there was plenty of tension building and a lot of a claustrophobic feeling due to the circumstances.My only niggle is that I didn't get to really understand what the thing was that created the 'problem' and as a reader didn't get to know what the creatures were. However for me it was the characters that mattered and how they bonded and coped with the new world they were facing.I wouldn't say that this story was a horror and it wasn't scary but it was more about the unknown and what was going to happen next and to who. I quite enjoyed this book for what it was and maybe it's a good starting point for somebody to delve into dystopian fiction.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I read this book in a shabby, not well secured beach cottage, and I barely slept at night. I loved every minute of it. Don't ask too many questions and just enjoy the ride.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    This book started out great for me. I was literally like, "Yes! YES! This is going to be awesome!" as I read the first quarter or so. I liked the writing a lot.

    And then things started to slow for me. Little things about the worldbuilding started to niggle at me...and then it went from slow to dragging (for me; YMMV), making it even easier for me to get distracted by the niggles. So I went a couple days without even opening it. The story picked up again later on, but the things that were niggling continued to niggle, and in the end I didn't find the ending all that satisfying.

    Overall I'd say it was decent but not great.

    Would I read a sequel? No. Would I read an unrelated book by Malerman? Yes, absolutely. The writing in this one was good enough for me to want to try him again, and as this was a debut, chances are he'll only get better from here.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    . I was so into the unknown aspect. Not knowing what the "creature" was, not knowing where Malorie was headed on her journey down the river. I found that I wanted to keep turning the pages. This is an interesting take on the dystopian novel. I don't normally read or enjoy them, but I found the horror aspect of this one intriguing. The fact that no one was able to see was quite scary to me. I was trying to picture going through much of my life blindfolded and not able to go outside without one. The book has a lot of "not knowing" and I enjoyed that aspect of it. I was surprised a lot and that makes for a good story as well. One of the best aspects of the story is the arrival of Gary and his part in the story. Stephen King this is not, but for a first horror novel it was pretty good.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Bird Box tells the story Mallorie, a young mother who has not looked outside of her home in more than four years due to her fear of the unknown creatures that make anyone who sees them go insane. Flashing between the time when Mallorie first discovers she is pregnant while the epidemic seems far away and Mallorie is living with a group of people who share a common goal, and over four years later while Mallorie and her children attempt to escape their home in hopes of finding somewhere safer, Bird Box builds its tension slowly and lets you simmer in your questions; what is making these people go insane, and why are Mallorie and her children now completely alone? The story itself is beautifully told, and builds incredible imagery throughout the novel. I particularly enjoyed the flashbacks between the two points in time. Knowing that Mallorie ends up alone leads to incredible suspense each time a new character is introduced or whenever the group attempts a riskier maneuver, leaving you wondering, is this it? Is this how they die? Josh Malerman also did a great job of showing the trajectory of the epidemic, starting from the beginning when reports of people going insane and killing themselves are countries away, up until people that Mallorie herself knows and cares for begin to suffer from the affliction themselves. Because of the nature of the story, I think that Bird Box benefits from its audio form. The novel contains detailed descriptions of how the world outside feels and sounds, as whenever the characters go outside they are blindfolded. Hearing the words spoken aloud provides an interesting perspective- rather than seeing these descriptions for yourself, you are hearing them described to you. And because this book is so descriptive, being able to close your eyes and visualize the story unfolding adds an extra layer onto the story (and gives you a small idea of what it may be like to be a character in this world).This book is dark; many of the characters have suffered from extreme tragedies prior to the part of their story told in Bird Box, and most suffer more while we are with them. However, if you are in the mood for another great apocalyptic thriller, I encourage you to give this one a try!My rating: 4/5 stars. This book reminded me a lot of The Fireman by Joe Hill, so if you are looking for a read-a-like this one may be for you!
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Great premise! I am a fan of near/post apocalyptic storylines that have an adult tone. This book immediately built the suspense and tension but it sizzled out a little for me during the flashbacks as those events became anti-climatic because of the river journey. But was still anxious to turn the pages to the end. I also enjoy storylines where there are several – what would I do in those situation moments, especially those when there are so many unknowns and this book provided several for me to ponder.This debut novel was well-paced and engaging though the book focused on the information that the characters knew about I wanted to know a little bit more of the big picture of the situation. I look forward to reading future books by the author.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    A strange phenomenon has taken over the world. It started with just a few people in Russia and quickly spread to the rest of the world. People are looking at something – we don’t know what – and then after they see it they go crazy and savagely murder whoever they’re with before gruesomely killing themselves.Malorie is pregnant, which somewhat complicates living in this new world where one must keep their eyes closed at all times when outside to avoid becoming a victim of the mysterious, unknown thing. Luckily, she finds refuge with a group of strangers who live in a house where they have meticulously covered all the windows with blankets or cardboard. They close their eyes or wear a blindfold whenever they need to go outside.Bird Box alternates between the time period in which the phenomenon started and four years later, when Malorie is rowing blindfolded down a river with two children that she calls only Girl and Boy. Where is she going and why?This book was so scary! At one point, I was so engrossed in the story and so worried about these people that when my husband walked in the room and tried to talk to me, I just about jumped out of my skin.I thought about Malorie and her friends’ predicament for days. I can’t imagine keeping my eyes shut for long trips outside without even reflexively peeking a little. Clearly, I would not last very long!I rarely read horror but my bestie, Nerdy Apple, recommended it to me and we have pretty much the same taste in books. She said that if I liked The Girl with All the Gifts, then I would like Bird Box. And she was right! I thought it was a unique twist on a zombie apocalypse type scenario. I only have two complaints. One – the author, described labor pains as occurring at the waist. I think he should have asked a woman about the location of contractions to write about them more realistically. Secondly, the ending was not neatly wrapped up and I like resolution. I can see why Malerman wrote it that way though. It made it creepier and left room for a sequel, which I would definitely read. Highly recommend to horror fans or anyone who enjoys the thrill of being scared.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Something is out there . . .Something terrifying that must not be seen. One glimpse and a person is driven to deadly violence. No one knows what it is or where it came from.....I Thoroughly enjoyed this book. It was one of the best psychologically terrifying books I've read in a long time. It has some small flaws but overall is really well written.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    Samarago's Blindness meets Day of the Triffids with a dash of The last Man - not to imply that it's derivative, I agree that it is very good and engaging. But it's pretty firmly in the horror category for me - there no sfnal explanation is even proposed, let alone resolved, for what has been going on, and the mechanisms used by the evil forces to wreak evil seem a bit magical to me.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Don't Open Your Eyes....

    Where do I even begin...this book was fantastic and the audio was like the icing on the cake! I haven't had much luck with "endings" lately but even the ending of this book, suited the story perfectly. It was great! But let me backup...

    BirdBox is horror/dystopian book. Something outside is causing everyone to go crazy & suicidal. As a result, the world as we know it breaks down & only a few people remain as survivors. The story follows those people's lives through this catastrophe & you see what they go through to survive.

    This was hands down my most favorite horror/dystopian book. Malerman nailed every aspect of it from beginning to end, from characters to narrator etc. The way he uses certain elements like dogs, birds, blindfolds, voices etc. to ratchet up your anxiety is nothing short of amazing. If I could have given this book 6 stars I would have. It's a definite must-read! This is one of those books though that you really need to listen to the audio to get the full experience. The narrator's voice for Mallory, one of the main characters, is perfect. She really grasps who she is as a person. It's exactly what I would expect her to sound like. I definitely recommend listening to the audio version.





  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I gave this book 4 stars because I believed it enough to be glad I am 73 and will not be around for anything like this....No thank you very much. The changes that have occurred are bad enough. The writing and story line were for the most part clear and concise. As I get older it is harder when the story line jumps back and forth from past to present. Which this did often....Very scary and chilling.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    How do you survive in a dangerous world you cannot see? Welcome to a postapocalyptic world where you simply cannot open your eyes. Those who do eventually see a "creature" which causes them to go mad, violently attacking their loved ones and strangers and killing themselves. Few survivors exist several months after the first creatures are spotted, and those who do, must cover all the windows and blindfold themselves if they go outside. Malorie is several months pregnant when she first seeks refuge with a group of survivors in an abandoned home. In opposing chapters, Malorie is now raising her two four year old children in isolation, trying to move them to an unknown location 40 miles away. What happens in between is very suspenseful, as it is not clear how Malorie ends up by herself with the children and if she will eventually see the creatures that threaten their lives.This is a terrifying and suspenseful thriller, where the enemy is unknown but death is only moments away at any given point. I can't believe I waited so long to read this book. If I were you, I would download it immediately.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    What can I say about this book? It was a different genre for me and it held my attention, I needed to know what was out there.I can't imagine having to live like these people, can't imagine doing what they had to do - I honestly don't think I could've done it.This book is pure suspense. I love suspense. I did have questions at the end of the book but I believe they are all natural questions evolving from the unnatural way of life that I can't comprehend.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    I didn't quite realize I was picking up another dystopian novel when I started this one. Seems I've read more than my fair share of them this year. But this one is not only depressing but downright creepy. Imagine a world in which people suddenly begin going mad, usually resulting in suicide. No one knows exactly what causes this madness, other than the fact that it happens after seeing something or someone. Thus, the small population that remains does so by keeping their eyes closed or blindfolding themselves so as not to risk seeing whatever it is that's out there.I'm not sure I'd classify this as horror, because it's not horror in the traditional sense. But it's creepy. The beauty of this book is that it invokes paranoia in the reader by taking away the sense of sight. Without sight, the imagination runs wild. With the exception of some less-than-realistic scenes near the end of the book, the story is for the most part unique and well-written, although it does leave the reader with some unanswered questions. I listened on audio and was on the edge of my seat for a majority of the second half of the book, not wanting to get out of the car. If you're up for a disturbing and thought-provoking book that will stick with you for a while, this one will fit the bill.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    There is nothing more terrifying than the unknown. That’s why the night has always been an especially fearful time with all sorts of scary monsters lurking just outside of the campfire’s light. But what if you lived in a world where not knowing was the only chance you had of staying alive?That’s the set-up. Malorie’s world changed forever when the internet blew up with reports of people seeing something and then flying into murderous rages before taking their own lives. It happened so quickly that no one could say what that something was. The only way to be safe was to make sure you didn’t see whatever it is that is out there. Lock your doors. Black out your window. Whatever you do, don’t go outside. What follows is a dystopian tale similar to many we have all read over the years, where most of humanity has perished and the few lucky, or unlucky, souls that remain must endure a constant struggle just to stay alive in an increasingly alien world. This is a scenario not unlike Day of the Triffids but it does have unique elements that ramp up the feelings of dread. Some people have expressed disappointment with the ending. I’m not sure if they did so because they wanted an explanation for what happened. If that is the case, these people are mistaken. To provide answers in this book would be tantamount to having a magician revealing his tricks. Remember, there is nothing more terrifying than the unknown.Bottom line: This was a very engaging tale that kept me on the edge of my seat. It doesn't tie things up neatly but it does provide a sufficient degree of resolution. I also really glad that my name is Tom. (This will make sense once you read it.)FYI: On a 5-point scale I assign stars based on my assessment of what the book needs in the way of improvements:•5 Stars – Nothing at all. If it ain’t broke, don’t fix it.•4 Stars – It could stand for a few tweaks here and there but it’s pretty good as it is.•3 Stars – A solid C grade. Some serious rewriting would be needed in order for this book to be considered great or memorable.•2 Stars – This book needs a lot of work. A good start would be to change the plot, the character development, the writing style and the ending. •1 Star - The only thing that would improve this book is a good bonfire.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    Bird Box is good. Bird Box is excellent. Bird Box is a wonderful thriller that I recommend to horror and suspense readers alike. There is a plethora of adjectives I could put here in this (bird) box, but the book is short enough for you to create your own.
  • Rating: 4 out of 5 stars
    4/5
    A very strange book, that crept into my dreams. Glad I read it, it was impressive to see how determined a mother can be to save her children no matter how bad the world becomes.

Book preview

Bird Box - Josh Malerman

one

Malorie stands in the kitchen, thinking.

Her hands are damp. She is trembling. She taps her toe nervously on the cracked tile floor. It is early; the sun is probably only peeking above the horizon. She watches its meager light turn the heavy window drapes a softer shade of black and thinks,

That was a fog.

The children sleep under chicken wire draped in black cloth down the hall. Maybe they heard her moments ago on her knees in the yard. Whatever noise she made must have traveled through the microphones, then the amplifiers that sat beside their beds.

She looks to her hands and detects the subtlest sheen in the candlelight. Yes, they are damp. The morning’s dew is still fresh upon them.

Now, in the kitchen, Malorie breathes deep before blowing the candle out. She looks around the small room, noting the rusted utensils and cracked dishes. The cardboard box used as a garbage can. The chairs, some held together by twine. The walls are dirty. Dirt from the feet and hands of the children. But older stains, too. The bottom of the walls in the hall is discolored, profound purples that have dulled to brown over time. These are blood. The carpet in the living room is discolored, too, no matter how hard Malorie scrubs. There are no chemicals in the house to help clean it. Long ago, Malorie filled the buckets with water from the well and, using a suit coat, worked on removing the stains from all over the house. But they refused to go away. Even those that proved less persistent remained, a shadow perhaps of their original size, but still horribly visible. A box of candles hides a blotch in the foyer. The couch in the living room sits at an awkward angle, moved there to shield two blemishes that look like wolf heads to Malorie. On the second floor, by the attic stairs, a pile of musty coats conceals purple scratches, embedded deep into the foot of the wall. Ten feet away is the blackest stain in the house. She does not use the far end of the home’s second floor because she cannot bring herself to cross it.

This was once a nice house in a nice suburb of Detroit. Once, it was family-ready and safe. Only half a decade ago, a real-estate agent would have proudly showed it off. But this morning, the windows are covered with cardboard and wood. There is no running water. A big wooden bucket sits upon the kitchen counter. It smells stale. There are no conventional toys for the children. Pieces of a wooden chair have been whittled to play the part of little people. Small faces have been painted upon them. The cupboards are bare. There are no paintings on the walls. Wires run from under the back door into the first-floor bedrooms, where amplifiers alert Malorie and the children to any sounds coming from outside the house. The three of them live this way. They do not go outside for long periods of time. When they do, they are blindfolded.

The children have never seen the world outside their home. Not even through the windows. And Malorie hasn’t looked in more than four years.

Four years.

She does not have to make this decision today. It’s October in Michigan. It’s cold. A twenty-mile trip on the river will be hard on the children. They may still be too young. What if one of them were to fall into the water? What would Malorie, blindfolded, do then?

An accident, Malorie thinks. How horrible. After all this struggling, all this survival. To die because of an accident.

Malorie looks at the drapes. She begins to cry. She wants to yell at someone. She wants to plead with anyone who might listen. This is unfair, she would say. This is cruel.

She looks over her shoulder, to the kitchen entrance and the hall that leads to the children’s bedroom. Beyond the doorless frame, the children sleep soundly, covered by black cloth, hidden from light and sight. They do not stir. They show no sign of being awake. Yet, they could be listening to her. Sometimes, for all the pressure upon them to listen, for all the importance she’s placed upon their ears, Malorie believes they can hear her think.

She could wait for sunnier skies, warmth, more attention paid to the boat. She could inform the children, listen to what they have to say. Their suggestions could be good ones. Only four years old, but trained to listen. Able to help navigate a boat that will be piloted blindly. Malorie would not be able to make the trip without them. She needs their ears. Could she also use their advice? At four years old, would they have something to say about when was the best time to leave the house forever?

Slumping into a kitchen chair, Malorie fights back the tears. Her shoeless toe still taps on the faded linoleum. Slowly, she looks up to the top of the cellar stairs. There she once talked with a man named Tom about a man named Don. She looks to the sink, where Don once carried buckets of well water, trembling for having been outdoors. Leaning forward, she can see the foyer, where Cheryl used to prepare the food for the birds. And between herself and the front door is the living room, silent and dark, where there are too many memories of too many people to digest.

Four years, she thinks, and wants to smash her fist through the wall.

Malorie knows that four years can easily become eight. Eight will quickly become twelve. And then the children will be adults. Adults who have never seen the sky. Never looked out a window. What would twelve years of living like veal do to their minds? Is there a point, Malorie wonders, where the clouds in the sky become unreal, and the only place they’ll ever feel at home is behind the black cloth of their blindfolds?

Malorie swallows hard and imagines raising them by herself until they are teens.

Could she even do it? Could she protect them another ten years? Could she guard them long enough for them to guard her? And for what? What kind of life is she protecting them for?

You’re a bad mother, she thinks.

For not finding a way to let them know the vastness of the sky. For not finding a way to let them run free in the yard, the street, the neighborhood of empty homes and weathered parked cars. Or granting them a single peek, just once, into space, when the sky turns black and is suddenly, beautifully, spotted with stars.

You are saving their lives for a life not worth living.

Malorie sees the drapes soften another degree through blurred, teary vision. If there is a fog out there, it won’t be for long. And if it can help her, if it hides her and the children as they go to the river, to the rowboat, then she has to wake them now.

She slams a hand against the kitchen table, then wipes her eyes dry.

Rising and leaving the kitchen, Malorie takes the hall and enters the children’s bedroom.

Boy! she yells. Girl! Get up.

The bedroom is dark. The one window is covered with enough blankets so that even at its zenith, sunlight does not get through. There are two mattresses, one on each side of the room. Above them are black domes. Once, the chicken wire that supports the cloth was used to fence in a small garden by the well in the home’s backyard. But for the past four years, it has served as armor, protecting the children not from what could see them, but from what they could see. Beneath it, Malorie hears movement and she kneels to loosen the wire that’s fastened to nails in the room’s wood floor. She is already pulling from her pocket the blindfolds as the two children look at her with sleepy, surprised expressions.

Mommy?

Get up. Now. Mommy needs you to move fast.

The children respond quickly. They do not whine or complain.

Where are we going? the Girl asks.

Malorie hands her a blindfold and says, Put this on. We’re going on the river.

The pair take their blindfolds and tie the black cloth tightly over their eyes. They are well versed in the motion. Experts, if at four years old they can be experts in anything. It breaks Malorie’s heart. They are only children and should be curious. They should be asking her why, today, they are going on the river—a river they have never been on before.

But, instead, they just do as they are told.

Malorie does not put on her own blindfold yet. She will get the kids ready first.

Bring your puzzle, she tells the Girl. And, both of you, bring your blankets.

The excitement she feels is unnameable. It’s much more like hysteria. Stepping from one room to another, Malorie checks for things, small items they might need. Suddenly, she feels horribly unprepared. She feels unsafe, as though the house and the earth beneath it just vanished, exposing her to the outside world entirely. Yet, in the mania of the moment, she holds tight to the concept of the blindfold. No matter what tools she might pack, no matter what household object might be used as a weapon, she knows that the blindfolds are their strongest protection.

Bring your blankets! she reminds them, hearing the two small bodies ready themselves. Then she steps into their room to assist them. The Boy, small for his age, but with a wiry strength Malorie takes pride in, is deciding between two shirts that are both too large for him. They once belonged to an adult, long since gone. Malorie chooses for him and watches as his dark hair vanishes within the cloth, then sprouts again through the head hole. In her anxious state, Malorie recognizes that the Boy has grown some recently.

The Girl, average sized for her age, is attempting to pull a dress over her head, a dress she and Malorie sewed from an old bedsheet.

There’s a chill in the air, Girl. A dress won’t do.

The Girl frowns; her blond hair is messy from her having just woken up.

I’ll wear pants, too, Mommy. And we’ve got our blankets.

Anger flares in Malorie. She doesn’t want any resistance. Not today. Not even if the Girl is right.

"No dresses today."

The world outside, the empty malls and restaurants, the thousands of unused vehicles, the forgotten products on idle store shelves, all of it presses in on the house. It all whispers of what awaits them.

She takes a coat from the closet in the small bedroom down the hall from the children. Then she leaves the room, for what she knows will be the last time.

Mommy, the Girl says, meeting her in the hall. Do we need our bicycle horns?

Malorie breathes deep.

No, she answers. We’ll all be together. The whole trip.

As the Girl steps back into the bedroom, Malorie thinks of how pathetic it is, that bicycle horns are her children’s greatest entertainment. They’ve played with them for years. All of their lives, honking from across the living room. The loud sound used to put Malorie on edge. But she never took them away. Never hid them. Even in the throes of early, anxious motherhood, Malorie understood that in this world, anything that brought the children to giggle was a good thing.

Even when they used to frighten Victor with them.

Oh, how Malorie longs for that dog! In the early days of raising the children alone, her fantasies of taking the river included Victor, the border collie, seated beside her in the rowboat. Victor would’ve warned her if an animal were near. He might’ve been capable of frightening something away.

Okay, she says, her lithe body in the door frame of the children’s bedroom. That’s it. Now we go.

There were times, placid afternoons, tempestuous evenings, when Malorie told them this day might come. Yes, she had spoken of the river before. Of a trip. She was careful never to call it their escape because she couldn’t bear their believing their daily lives were something to flee from. Instead, she cautioned them of a future morning, when she would wake them, hastily, demanding they prepare to leave their home forever. She knew they could detect her uncertainty, just as they could hear a spider crawling up the glass pane of a draped window. For years, there sat a small pouch of food in the cupboard, set aside until it went stale, always replaced, always replenished, Malorie’s proof, her evidence that she might wake them as she told them she would. You see, she would think, nervously checking the drapes, the food in the cupboard is part of a plan.

And now, the day has come. This morning. This hour. The fog.

The Boy and the Girl step forward and Malorie kneels before them. She checks their blindfolds. They are secure. In that moment, looking from one small face to the other, Malorie comprehends fully that, at last, the journey out has begun.

Listen to me, she tells them, grasping their chins. We’re going to take a rowboat along the river today. It could be a long trip. But it’s crucial that you both do every single thing I say. Do you understand?

Yes.

Yes.

It’s cold out there. You have your blankets. You have your folds. There’s nothing more you need right now. Do you understand me?

Yes.

Yes.

Under no circumstances will either one of you remove your blindfold. If you do, I will hurt you. Do you understand?

Yes.

Yes.

I need your ears. I need you both to listen as carefully as you can. On the river, you need to listen beyond the water, beyond the woods. If you hear an animal in those woods, tell me. If you hear anything in the water, you tell me. Understand?

Yes.

Yes.

"Do not ask questions that have nothing to do with the river. You’ll be sitting up front, she says, tapping the Boy. Then she taps the Girl. And you’ll be sitting in the back. When we get to the boat, I’ll guide you to those places. I’ll be in the middle, rowing. I don’t want you two talking across the boat to one another unless it’s about something you hear in the woods. Or the river. Understand?"

Yes.

Yes.

We are not stopping for any reason. Not until we get to where we’re going. I’ll let you know when that is. If you get hungry, eat from this pouch.

Malorie brings the pouch to the back of their small hands.

"Don’t fall asleep. Do not fall asleep. I need your ears more now today than I’ve ever needed them."

Will we bring the microphones? the Girl asks.

No.

As Malorie speaks, she looks from one blindfolded face to the other.

When we leave this house, we’ll hold hands and walk along the path to the well. We’ll go through the small clearing in the woods behind our house. The path to the river is overgrown. We may have to drop hands for a step, and if we do, I want you both to hold on to my coat or each other’s. Understand?

Yes.

Yes.

Do they sound scared?

Listen to me. We’re going somewhere neither of you has ever been. We’re going farther from the house than you’ve gone before. There are things out there that will hurt you, that will hurt Mommy, if you do not listen to me, now, this morning.

The children are silent.

Do you understand?

Yes.

Yes.

Malorie has trained them well.

All right, she says, her voice revealing a hint of hysteria. "We’re going. We’re going right now. We’re going."

She presses their heads against her forehead.

Then she takes each child by the hand. They cross the house quickly. In the kitchen, Malorie, trembling, wipes her eyes and pulls her own blindfold from her pocket. She ties it tight around her head and dark long hair. She pauses, her hand on the doorknob, the door that opens to the path she has taken for countless buckets of water.

She is about to leave the house behind. The reality of this moment overwhelms her.

When she opens the door, the cool air rushes in and Malorie steps forward, her mind’s eye blurry with terror and scenarios too ghastly to speak of in front of the children. She stammers as she speaks, nearly yelling as she does.

Hold my hands. Both of you.

The Boy takes Malorie’s left hand. The Girl slips her tiny fingers into her right.

Blindfolded, they step from the house.

The well is twenty yards away. Small pieces of wood, once part of picture frames, outline the path, placed there for direction. Both children have touched the wood with the tip of their shoes countless times. Malorie once told them that the water in the well was the only medicine they’d ever need. Because of this, Malorie knows, the children have always respected the well. They never complained about fetching water with her.

At the well now, the ground is bumpy beneath their feet. It feels unnatural, soft.

Here’s the clearing, Malorie calls.

She leads the children carefully. A second path begins ten yards from the well. The entrance to this path is narrow, and it splits the woods. The river is less than a hundred yards from here. At the woods, Malorie momentarily lets go of the children’s hands so she can feel for the scant entry.

Hold on to my coat!

She feels along the branches until she finds a tank top, tied to a tree at the path’s entrance. She tied it here herself more than three years ago.

The Boy grabs hold of her pocket and she senses the Girl take hold of his. Malorie calls to them as she walks, constantly asking them if they are holding on to one another. Tree branches poke her in the face. She does not cry out.

Soon, they arrive at the marker Malorie has stuck in the dirt. The splintered leg of a kitchen chair, stuck in the center of the path, there for her to trip on, to stumble over, to recognize.

She discovered the rowboat four years ago, docked only five houses from their own. It has been more than a month since she last checked on it, but she believes it is still there. Still, it’s difficult not to imagine the worst. What if someone else got to it first? Another woman, not unlike herself, living five houses in the other direction, using every day of four years to gather enough courage to flee. A woman who once stumbled down this same slippery bank and felt the same point of salvation, the pointed steel tip of the rowboat.

The air nips at the scratches on Malorie’s face. The children do not complain.

This is not childhood, Malorie thinks, leading them toward the river.

Then she hears it. Before reaching the dock, she hears the rowboat rocking in the water. She stops and checks the children’s blindfolds, tightening both. She leads them onto the wood planks.

Yes, she thinks, it’s still here. Just like the cars are still parked in the street outside their house. Just like the homes on the street are still empty.

It is colder, out of the woods, away from the house. The sound of the water is as frightening as it is exhilarating. Kneeling where she believes the boat must be, she lets go of the children’s hands and feels for the steel tip. Her fingertips find the rope that holds it first.

Boy, she says, pulling the ice-cold tip of the boat toward the dock. In the front. Get in the front. She helps him. Once he is steady, she holds his face in both her hands and says once again, "Listen. Beyond the water. Listen."

She tells the Girl to stay on the dock as she blindly unties the rope before carefully climbing onto the middle bench. Still half-standing, she helps the Girl aboard. The boat rocks once violently and Malorie grips the Girl’s hand too tight. The Girl does not cry out.

There are leaves, sticks, and water in the bottom of the boat. Malorie sifts through them to find the paddles she has stowed on the boat’s right side. The paddles are cold. Damp. They smell of mildew. She sets them into the steel grooves. They feel strong, sturdy as she uses one to push off from the dock. And then . . .

They

Enjoying the preview?
Page 1 of 1