- Published: 29 October 2020
- ISBN: 9781473575899
- Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 416
The Apparition Phase
Shortlisted for the 2021 McKitterick Prize
- Published: 29 October 2020
- ISBN: 9781473575899
- Imprint: Cornerstone Digital
- Format: EBook
- Pages: 416
A delight for both the expert and the uninitiated, this creepy tale is a carapace of cosy nostalgia wrapped round a solid thread of dread ... A page turner that keeps you in dreaded suspense of what you are about to be shown ... A claustrophobic and entertaining read that left me breathless ... Horror for the connoisseur.
Alice Lowe
Outstanding debut ... ideal for fans of Andrew Michael Hurley
Metro
There are chills galore in this enjoyable 70s-set debut about disturbed teenagers and malevolent spirits ... Anyone who remembers the 70s will thrill to Maclean's depiction of the period... The ending of the novel is particularly impressive, with Maclean bringing together both his novelistic and scriptwriting skills to full effect... Maclean brings together this strain of wild rural gothic with some slick TV plotting and a depiction of 70s British suburban life to produce a novel that amounts to considerably more than the sum of its parts, with moments of hallucinatory brilliance ... [a] very successfully scary book about twins and chaos and loss - may be the perfect novel for our phantom present.
Guardian
A fascinating and spooky denouement, kept me on the edge of my seat and I can't think of a better read for this Halloween than Will Maclean's suspenseful and entertaining The Apparition Phase.
Good Reads
Pacing is intense, I was on the edge of my seat from the moment Tim got to that manor until the end. Maclean's writing style fits the horror genre perfectly and it was a great debut novel, not to mention it sets the bar very high for him on his next book!
Caffeinated Reader
The atmosphere of this novel is effective, an example of using a kind of listless 70s landscape to explore the supernatural, growing up, and trauma (70s British gothic should be a genre by now, if it isn't already). There's a good balance between actual malevolent spirits and what is realistic troubles from non-supernatural life, making it a book less focusing on jumpy scares than a lingering sense of bleakness. This probably made it an unintentionally good read for the week before Halloween at a time when there's plenty of real life horrors going on.
Fiendfully Reading
It's the perfect time of year to read this book - the dark nights, cold weather and the noises that houses make as they settle down for the winter are the ideal backdrop for this genre. I do hope Maclean writes more stories like this, I am very keen to read what comes next. *Please let there be another!*
Female First
This unnerving, creepy and claustrophobic literary ghost story is perfect for fans of Shirley Jackson's gothic horror The Haunting of Hill House.
CultureFly
Set in 1970s Suffolk, it's a riot of references that will thrill the disquieted children of the era ... a twisting and chilling story ... the perfect Ghost Story for Christmas 2020.
Fortean Times
A gripping commentary on the English obsession with class and how they deal with grief- and a nostalgic delight for those who devoured the popular paperback ghost stories of the 1970s and 80s.
Irish Independent
Will Maclean's The Apparition Phase is an extraordinarily powerful account of growing up in the Seventies ... Tim and Abi's enthusiasm for the weird is wonderfully infectious, and the séance scenes later in the book are truly hairs-on-the-back-of-the-neck stuff. But most of all, Maclean has captured the feel of the Seventies impeccably. This book is a must for anyone touched by hauntology.
Fortean Times
A truly unsettling literary ghost story where the shadows encroach and dread lurks around every corner.
Lucie McKnight Hardy, author of WATER SHALL REFUSE THEM
This eerie novel is a splendid, compelling tribute to the era that inspired it
The Herald
Clear your diary, switch off your phone, and get lost in this atmospheric and madly gripping ghost story. You won't sleep until you find out - and you won't sleep afterwards, either
Daily Mirror