The Edge of Sleep
Jake Emanuel, Willie Block
St. Martin’s Press
SF/Horror
Pages: 304
Pub Date: June 20, 2023
DESCRIPTION/SYNOPSIS:
What if the whole world fell asleep…and didn’t wake up again?
Dave Torres, a night watchman in a placid coastal town, knows all about sleep troubles. Since childhood, he’s battled terrors and nightmares. Sometimes those battles leak into his waking life, with disastrous consequences for those he loves. Now Dave lives alone and self-medicates to neutralize his dreams. It’s not much of a life, he knows.
The morning after Independence Day, Santa Mira, California, is so quiet Dave can hear the ocean from miles away. Traffic signals blink from red to green over empty intersections. Storefronts remain locked up tight. Every radio station whispers static.
And all over town, there are bodies, lying right where their owners left them. Dead right where they slept.
Dave—along with his ex-girlfriend, Katie, his best friend, Matteo, and Linda, a nurse he’s just met—struggle to unravel the mystery before sleep overtakes them all.
Except the answer to the mystery might lie in the one place that frightens Dave most: His twisted, unnerving dreams. Now Dave and his friends must straddle the liminal boundary between life and death as they fight to save everyone they’ve ever loved—and to keep their eyes open.
Because if any of them falls asleep now, it will be the last thing they ever do.
REVIEW:
Either I never knew or had forgotten that The Edge of Sleep is based on a well-known podcast, so that information did not color my reading experience at all. It is, however, the first novel I’ve read that was based upon that particular medium. I requested a copy of the eGalley because I was intrigued by the premise: if you fall sleep, you die. That simple. And I was instantly curious how that would play out, as everyone needs to sleep, eventually, or it does not end well. The story had a bit of a rough start, with way too many “homeys” laced in the dialogue between Dave and Matteo. A few go a long way. After that, I thought the novel gained momentum, as the two discover endless bodies of those who had the expected misfortune of simply falling asleep. The authors lighten the mood quite a bit with more humor than I would have expected given the circumstances. But I began to wonder at the repeated scenes of random people drifting off to dreamland for the final time. It’s hard to wring much suspense out of people falling asleep, especially if they are not the main characters in the tale. Of course, by the time the characters we truly care about are fighting off exhaustion, the situation comes off as appropriately dire. The clock is literally ticking on how long they can go without eventually succumbing to sleep. This is when the story is most effective.
Our heroes seem ill-equipped to handle the problems with which they are faced, to somehow solve or even truly investigate the phenomenon of global apocalypse of death by sleep pandemic. (And for a global pandemic type of story, the cast is surprising small, which might be a result of its podcast origins, I’m guessing.) While Dave, a night watchman by trade, has had a lifelong history of nightmares and night terrors, which has put him at odds with sleep in general, it hardly seems a likely resume to get him out of trouble in the long term or help in resolving the story. Matteo has a military background as a drone pilot, the consequences of which still haunt him and cause ongoing nightmares as well. Linda, a nurse who joins the crew after they visit her desolate ER, has access to meds and advice on how to keep them going without sleep for as long as possible.
Overall, this novel is difficult to review in that it withholds its answers (some of them, anyway) until the last few pages, and at that point, the story takes a couple unexpected turns (twists) which don’t completely pay off, so the reader is left hanging (kept awake!) for a presumed sequel which, without going into any spoilers, projects as a big genre shift in the storytelling. So, I’m of two minds with this book. I love suspense, and there’s plenty to be had here—even if most of it involves who will fall asleep versus who can stay awake the longest—but I would have preferred a wider net and more closure to wrap up this first volume.
Note: I received a free eGalley of The Edge of Sleep from Net Galley in consideration of an unbiased review.
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