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Thomas Olde Heuvelt

Author of Hex

20+ Works 2,689 Members 148 Reviews 1 Favorited

About the Author

Series

Works by Thomas Olde Heuvelt

Hex (2016) 1,699 copies, 88 reviews
Echo (2022) 416 copies, 23 reviews
Oracle (2024) 175 copies, 6 reviews
Dolores Dolly Poppedijn (2019) 79 copies, 3 reviews
The Ink Readers of Doi Saket (2013) 75 copies, 6 reviews
Darker Days: A Novel (2025) 53 copies, 2 reviews
November (2022) 49 copies, 1 review
You Know How the Story Goes (2018) 25 copies, 7 reviews
The Boy Who Cast No Shadow (2009) 24 copies, 5 reviews
Om nooit te vergeten (2017) 20 copies
Leerling Tovenaar Vader & Zoon (2008) 18 copies, 1 review
Harten Sara (2011) 17 copies, 3 reviews
The Day the World Turned Upside Down (2014) 13 copies, 3 reviews
Phantasamnesia (2004) 11 copies

Associated Works

Some of the Best from Tor.com: 2013 Edition (2013) — Contributor — 121 copies, 1 review
The Best Science Fiction and Fantasy of the Year, Volume 8 (2014) — Contributor — 116 copies, 6 reviews
The Apex Book of World SF: Volume 4 (Apex World of Speculative Fiction) (2015) — Contributor — 84 copies, 25 reviews
The Best Horror of the Year Volume Eleven (2019) — Contributor — 73 copies, 5 reviews
The Stories: Five Years of Original Fiction on tor.com (2013) — Contributor — 40 copies
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 47 • April 2014 (2014) — Contributor — 31 copies, 2 reviews
Lightspeed Magazine, Issue 71 • April 2016 (2016) — Contributor — 9 copies
Harland Awards (2020) 2 copies
Best of Thrillers (2022) 1 copy

Tagged

Dutch (17) Dutch literature (17) ebook (41) fantasy (79) fiction (131) ghosts (10) hardcover (11) horror (257) Kindle (35) library (11) mystery (10) Netherlands (16) novel (11) own (12) owned (16) paranormal (18) read (30) read in 2017 (11) science fiction (11) short stories (14) short story (13) signed (13) small town (11) supernatural (20) thriller (54) to-read (390) translation (17) unread (10) witchcraft (13) witches (45)

Common Knowledge

Canonical name
Olde Heuvelt, Thomas
Legal name
Olde Heuvelt, Thomas Baudelet
Birthdate
1983-04-16
Gender
male
Occupations
novelist
short story writer
Nationality
Netherlands
Birthplace
Nijmegen, Netherlands
Places of residence
's-Hertogenbosch, Netherlands
Associated Place (for map)
Netherlands

Members

Reviews

153 reviews
The Publisher Says: NATURE IS CALLING—but they shouldn't have answered.

Travel journalist and mountaineer Nick Grevers awakes from a coma to find that his climbing buddy, Augustin, is missing and presumed dead. Nick’s own injuries are as extensive as they are horrifying. His face wrapped in bandages and unable to speak, Nick claims amnesia—but he remembers everything.

He remembers how he and Augustin were mysteriously drawn to the Maudit, a remote and scarcely documented peak in the show more Swiss Alps.

He remembers how the slopes of Maudit were eerily quiet, and how, when they entered its valley, they got the ominous sense that they were not alone.

He remembers: something was waiting for them...

But it isn’t just the memory of the accident that haunts Nick. Something has awakened inside of him, something that endangers the lives of everyone around him…

It’s one thing to lose your life. It’s another to lose your soul.

I RECEIVED A DRC FROM THE PUBLISHER VIA NETGALLEY. THANK YOU.

My Review
: I can't quite believe this is a translation. Its prose rings like a crystal wineglass.
Every year, climbers—sometimes entire teams—disappear into deep glacial voids and die in their frozen darkness. If the mountain is merciful, the drop is deep enough to smash them into silence in one go. Most victims, however, are trapped between blue, narrowing walls of ice, and as their body warmth melts the ice, they sink slowly deeper and deeper, until they die very consciously of asphyxiation.

I can't quite believe I have a son named Sam (he's so much like me it's scary) who lives in a novel. By a Dutch guy. Whom I've never met.
There are November mornings when the cold is clear, crackling, and crisp, but this cold was sticky, syrupy, clung to you. Like it was begging you for help. You, the first organism to have crossed its path, and would you please take it with you and protect it from what's about to happen, because that was much, much worse than the cold itself.

Jesus. The Morose hadn't even got started yet and my metaphors were already going haywire.

I can't quite write a real review yet...still stunned, too scared to go back and figure out why...but it's a week ago the book came out and honestly I'm still shook that all y'all ain't got it on your nightstands yet.
You’ve often asked me why I climb mountains. You’ve also often asked me (I wouldn’t say begged, though it’s not far off the mark) to stop. Our worst argument was about this, and it was the only time I was really afraid that I would lose you. I’ve never been able to fully explain it to you. I wonder if it’s at all possible to fully explain to someone who isn’t a climber. There’s an apparently unbridgeable gap between the thought that I risk my life doing something as trifling as climbing a cold lump of rock and ice…and the notion of traveling through a floating landscape, progressing with utmost concentration while having absolute control of the essential balance that keeps me alive and that, therefore, lets me live. Conquering that gap is possibly the most difficult climb in the life of any alpinist who is in a relationship.

What is wrong with people?! Go get this terrifying, propulsive, exquisitely personal and depressingly universal horror-adjacent thriller. Go on! March, young scalawag.
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The latest in a string of really strong horror novels that I've had the pleasure (horror???) of reading over the last month.

The premise here is CRAZY and super original. The town of Black Spring has been cursed (haunted, occupied, pick a word) for 350 years by the Black Rock Witch. She shows up in their homes, walks the streets, stands silently in the supermarket, and is otherwise a fixture in the daily lives of the town's inhabitants. There are festivals, there are witch tours in the show more woods, there's even an app the townsfolk use to track her whereabouts by signing in with the time and current sighting. The local teens have made her a subject of taunting and bullying, and there's a town-watch that tries to keep people from moving in and becoming part of the curse.

The first part of the book made me laugh cringingly just because of how .... normal it is for everyone to see this terrifying apparition constantly. A mother casually throws a dishcloth over the witch's face while she stands silently in a corner of their living room. The Council members hide her with an Easter Bunny cutout when she stands in the supermarket too long. It's still horrifying but there's a slightly unhinged and comic element early on. Then it just devolves into slow-creeping horror and eventually sheer terror.
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Nature was calling...but they shouldn't have answered.
Nick Grevers, an experienced mountaineer, is lucky to be alive following an accident which saw the death of his climbing buddy, Augustin. Nick is not in a good way, he's lucky to be alive; wrapped in bandages, unable to communicate verbally and horribly disfigured. Nick’s boyfriend, Sam, is horrified by the news and despite his love for Nick, feels unsure about their future together. But when a terrorist attack is carried out on the show more hospital Nick is in, Sam realizes that his life is and will always be with Nick. Nick’s experience on the mountain went beyond the horror to his face, his near death and the loss of his climbing partner.

I am a huge fan of believable horror and there is no better place to set the stories than in a beautiful but totally inhospitable environment...in this case...a mountain range. These are stories of people having to fight for survival against nature and everything that nature can throw at them. That is what made Echo the perfect read. It's a vivid tale of love, of loss, with a dose of supernatural horror. Chilling, creepy and everything that a horror fan wants in a spooky read. The reader will be drawn in from the incredibly eerie beginning to the devastating ending. I have to say that this was an experience that I will remember for a long time.

I didn't especially care for Sam at first. It took a while but by the third or so chapter I began to develop more affection for him. By the end of the book, I was sad to say goodbye. I wanted to know what happened to him and Augustin on Maudit, and why. Nick’s take on things is provided via his manuscript which he sends to Sam while he’s away in the states. Throughout the story sections of the manuscript are provided to the reader so the gaps can be filled in and the truth of what happened is slowly and gradually revealed. The love between Nick and Sam, despite the horror and devastation caused by the accident, is what shone through the strongest and it is almost devastating.

Would I recommend this book? Oh yes. Especially if you are a big fan of horror stories. It is a beautifully written, eerie tale of all-consuming love and heart wrenching loss. A slow burn novel which the reader can savored over the course of however much time it takes you to read it. It’s not a quick read but so worth every single moment you spend in the pages. The author builds up the suspense and increases the tension as the story moves along. Olde Heuvelt has once again created a novel that will work its way under your skin...as well as one that will stay with you for a long, long time to come.
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This is one of those books that you will either really, really like, or really, really dislike. To say it is strange would be the mother of all understatements. The witch is in your face from the start and honestly you have to feel some sympathy for her for all she's been through. She seems harmless enough on the surface....but no one wants to push that envelope. The Black Springs town people have come to accept her like the rest of us accept cable TV...it 's just there. I thought some the show more towns people were actually much scarier and dangerous. The plot and pacing is really effective once you get past the halfway mark but maybe I'm immune to it...but I didn't see the "horror" aspect. You have to keep turning pages to find out what happens next...yes...it's one of those kind of books. I understand the audio version leaves a lot to be desired. show less
½

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Statistics

Works
20
Also by
10
Members
2,689
Popularity
#9,553
Rating
½ 3.5
Reviews
148
ISBNs
95
Languages
10
Favorited
1

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