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What's a modern novel that creates an atmosphere of existential dread?
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James
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Nov 03, 2019 12:00PM

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Ligotti is the Godfather of existential dread. Some others that I think qualify:
Most books by Cormac McCarthy, especially Blood Meridian, or the Evening Redness in the West.
Area X: The Southern Reach Trilogy by VanderMeer, Jeff
Experimental Film by Gemma Files
The Visible Filth by Nathan Ballingrud
The Fisherman by John Langan
The Red Tree by Caitlín R. Kiernan

Depends on what you mean by "in the same way". I'm not a big fan of Stephen King.
A few novels that I've enjoyed in the last few years, with ample "dread and foreboding":
Brian Evenson, The Warren
Livia Llewellyn, The One That Comes Before
Amelia Gray, Threats
Colin Winnette, The Job of the Wasp

Are you sure existential horror is what you are after? Existential dread is that sense of being insignificant because the cosmos is so vast and overwhelming. Aside from nightmares leading to panic attacks as a child from this sense, the first book to arouse this feeling in a less visceral way for me was Carl Sagan's Cosmos. You probably prefer fiction though, in which case GoodReads has a list of 211 books that might interest you: https://www.goodreads.com/shelf/show/...

Toplin. Michael McDowell
J Howard Jacobson
The Curfew Jesse Ball and his
A Cure for Suicide
The Tenant Roland Torpor

I felt this way about It too. Didn't experience much existential dread.
Books mentioned in this topic
The Association (other topics)A Cure for Suicide (other topics)
Young Adam (other topics)
The Curfew (other topics)
The Tenant (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Bentley Little (other topics)T.E.D. Klein (other topics)
VanderMeer, Jeff (other topics)
Gemma Files (other topics)
Nathan Ballingrud (other topics)
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