Book Review: Beasts by Ingvild Bjerkeland
Title: Beast
Author: Ingvild Bjerkeland
Release date: March 11th, 2025
*Huge thanks to Netgalley and the Publisher for the digital ARC of this one!*
I’m a huge sucker for Norwegian, Finnish and Swedish horror. Whether TV, Movies or Books, the isolated locations and eeriness of story has always connected with me. I think a lot of it is because it reminds me a lot of where I grew up in Burton. We were remote, had wildlife galore, had sprawling mountains, darkest of nights, and there was always the sense that at any given moment you could be completely cut off from the outside world.
The cover of this one caught my attention immediately, especially when tied in with the title. The synopsis was also intriguing, so I was curious what could be done in such a short page count. As a fan of reading and writing novellas, I’m always a sucker for a less is more approach, so this one looked to be right up my alley.
What I liked: The story takes place not long after strange beasts have appeared around the world, ending things as we know it. A brother and sister are now on the run, having witnessed their mother’s death to one. They’re doing their best to survive, but the truth is, food is scarce and the beasts are numerous. Their dad was on a work trip on a remote island and they’ve heard that getting to the edge of the sea will get them on a boat and take them to where their father is.
One of my all-time favorite books is Cormac’s ‘The Road,’ and this is essentially that exact same book, only with monsters. In this case, it works for and against it. In ‘The Road’ the man and boy travel to the ocean’s edge in search of safety. They meet strangers along the way, some good, some bad and it’s a matter of trying to survive. Identical to this one.
Along the way, we see the kids finding places of shelter, random scraps and eventually a place with some safety. Some. As with all post-apocalyptic type books, places are never safe for long and life can change in an instant.
The ending is open enough and closed enough to satiate the reader’s journey, and considering this is classified as YA, though I’d suggest it’s probably closer to middle-grade, that’s a common aspect of how many of these books will end.
What I didn’t like: Well, it’s like ‘The Road’ but light. The Road Lite, I guess? It doesn’t break any ground and at times also reminded me of the 2010 movie, ‘Monsters,’ where the two characters need to make their way across Mexico to try and get back to the US border. It’s an engaging book, but one many people have read a million times. I think if I was my son’s age – eight – this book would rightly blow me away. At my old age – forty-three – I’ve experienced this all too often.
Why you should buy this: If you do have a young reader, this is an excellent book if you want to introduce them to the post-apocalyptic genre, or if they like books with kids having to survive against monsters. The writing is crisp, the pacing spot-on and I never got the sense that there was anything lost in translation.
Overall, a good book for adults who’ve read this stuff before, but a great book for new readers who’re not used to this type of narrative.
A solid, solid novella.
3/5