Madeline Usher has been buried alive. The doomed heroine comes to the
fore in this eerie reimagining of Edgar Allan Poe's classic short story
"The Fall of the House of Usher." Gothic, moody, and suspenseful from
beginning to end, The Fall is literary horror for fans of Miss
Peregrine's Home for Peculiar Children and Asylum.
Madeline awakes in a coffin. And she was put there by her own twin
brother. But how did it come to this? In short, non-chronological
chapters, Bethany Griffin masterfully spins a haunting and powerful tale
of this tragic heroine and the curse on the Usher family. The house
itself is alive, and it will never let Madeline escape, driving her to
madness just as it has all of her ancestors. But she won't let it have
her brother, Roderick. She'll do everything in her power to save
him--and try to save herself--even if it means bringing the house down
around them.
With a sinister, gothic atmosphere and relentless tension to rival Poe
himself, Bethany Griffin creates a house of horrors and introduces a
whole new point of view on a timeless classic. Kirkus Reviews praised
it in a starred review as "A standout take on the classic haunted-house
tale replete with surprises around every shadowy corner."