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TORRENT

Torrent by Anthony B. Gray is an emotionally charged psychological thriller that begins with a brutal tragedy and dives headfirst into grief, guilt, and the chaos that follows. The story centers on Samuel, a high-powered Atlanta attorney whose carefully ordered life unravels when his wife, Monica, dies by suicide following years of emotional neglect and shared trauma. The narrative takes us from opulent law offices to the hauntingly beautiful and treacherous wilderness of Canyon Park, where Samuel embarks on a trip meant to honor Monica’s memory and ends up confronting his own inner demons, dangerous strangers, and possibly something far darker than grief.

Gray’s writing is bold and unflinching. The opening chapters hit like a hammer. They’re vivid, tragic, full of jagged edges. He paints Samuel with a kind of clinical coldness, showing a man addicted to control and blind to emotion. And yet, as the story unfolds, there’s an unexpected tenderness beneath the grief. Gray doesn’t shy away from uncomfortable truths: the way ambition can slowly rot relationships, how denial makes us complicit, and how even the most successful lives can be hollowed out by loneliness. The pacing is tight, with bursts of poetic introspection giving way to a fast-moving, character-driven plot. I was impressed by how Gray weaves Monica’s presence through the whole book. She’s gone, but never really absent.

There were moments when the dialogue leaned into melodrama. Some scenes felt like they were pulled from a pulpy noir film more than a grounded psychological tale. Still, that unevenness didn’t dull the emotional impact. In fact, I think it gave the story a strange rhythm. Moments of emotional realism snapped against bursts of surreal tension. The latter half of the book turns almost horror-like, not with ghosts or monsters, but with the monsters we carry and the secrets we bury. It’s weird, gripping, and sometimes hard to read, but I couldn’t look away.

If you’ve ever wrestled with guilt, if you’ve loved someone too late, or if you just like your thrillers with a side of soul-searching, Torrent is worth your time. It starts with heartbreak and ends somewhere darker, but also, strangely, with a kind of redemption. I’d recommend it for readers who appreciate layered characters, emotional messiness, and stories that don’t tidy themselves up for comfort.

Pages: 149 | ASIN : B0DRJ8LSHC

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