The Weight of Cold Things

Lisa Towles’s The Weight of Cold Things is a meticulously paced psychological thriller that seamlessly bridges the rugged expanse of a Wyoming ranch with the desolate, industrial purgatory of Deadhorse, Alaska. The narrative follows Deputy Sheriff Gree Gooding, a woman already drowning in a “new religion” of avoidance six months after the mysterious disappearance and death of her geologist husband, AJ, in the Arctic. Her fragile status quo shatters when her boss and mentor, Teton County Sheriff Peter Barrett, vanishes, only for his wallet, stuffed with five thousand dollars, to surface on the frozen tundra of Prudhoe Bay next to an unidentified body. Forced into an uneasy alliance with her polarizing ex-lover, Woody, and a stoic Alaska State Trooper named Matt DeGuerre, Gree journeys north into a labyrinthine corporate cover-up. What begins as a missing person investigation quickly spirals into a dark reckoning involving a decades-old black-ops viral contagion, an elusive serial killer known as the Caretaker, and a devastating web of familial lies buried right in her own childhood pasture back home.

Reading this book felt like watching a slow-motion avalanche: quiet, heavy, and utterly unyielding. Towles expertly utilizes the claustrophobic, sub-zero atmosphere of the North Slope as a physical manifestation of Gree’s internal landscape. The perpetual semi-daylight and the biting “death’s breath” of the arctic wind wrap around the reader, making the sense of dread almost tactile. I found myself captivated by the dual layers of the mystery; the clinical investigation of the “Methuselah” virus and the missing oil workers perfectly balance the intimate, agonizing unraveling of Gree’s family history. Towles avoids cheap jump scares, choosing instead to distill a pervasive, gothic unease from the vastness of the setting.

The intricate labyrinth of shifting alliances and peripheral characters from shady airport supervisors to sudden forensic psychologists adds a rich, multi-layered texture that beautifully expands the scope of the mystery without derailing the narrative’s velocity. Gree’s voice remains a masterclass in hard-boiled vulnerability. She is fiercely competent yet emotionally fractured, a “watcher” who operates with a jaded precision that feels bracingly realistic. Her complex, thready interactions with Woody add a realistic friction, ensuring the human drama never takes a back seat to the labyrinthine black-ops plot.

This chilling psychological thriller will resonate with fans of procedural mysteries and arctic noir who crave existential depth alongside their adrenaline. Reminiscent of Peter Høeg’s Smilla’s Sense of Snow in its absolute reverence for the menacing, secretive property of ice, Towles delivers a story where geography is destiny. The Weight of Cold Things is a haunting exploration of generational trauma and corporate malice, proving that while secrets can be preserved in the deep freeze of time, the truth eventually thaws.

Coming August 2026

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The Literary Titan is an organization of professional editors, writers, and professors that have a passion for the written word. We review fiction and non-fiction books in many different genres, as well as conduct author interviews, and recognize talented authors with our Literary Book Award. We are privileged to work with so many creative authors around the globe.

Posted on May 25, 2026, in Book Reviews, Five Stars and tagged , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. Leave a comment.

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