Tantrum Audiolibro Por Rachel Eve Moulton arte de portada

Tantrum

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Tantrum

De: Rachel Eve Moulton
Narrado por: Rachel L. Jacobs
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In this electric horror novel from the author of The Insatiable Volt Sisters, an exhausted mother thinks her newborn might be a monster. She’s right.

Thea’s third pregnancy was her easiest. She wasn’t consumed with anxiety about the baby. She wasn’t convinced it was going to be born green, or have a third eye, or have tentacles sprouting from its torso. Thea was fine. Her baby would be fine.

But when the nurses handed Lucia to her, Thea just knew. Her baby girl was a monster. Not only was Lucia born with a full set of teeth and a devilish glint in her eye, but she’s always hungry. Indiscriminately so. One day Lucia pointed at her baby brother, looked Thea dead in the eye and said, “I eat.”

Thea doesn’t know whether to be terrified or proud of her rapacious baby girl. And as Lucia starts growing faster and talking more, dark memories bubble to the surface--flashes from Thea’s childhood that won’t release their hooks from her heart. Lucia wants to eat the world. Thea might just let her.

Crackling with originality and dark humor, Rachel Eve Moulton’s Tantrum is a provocative exploration of familial debt, duty, and the darker side of motherhood.

©2025 Rachel Eve Moulton (P)2025 Penguin Audio
Género Ficción Horror Psicológico Sincero Ingenioso Aterrador
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Tantrum is a first person point of view delve into the mind of a mother, who cannot connect with the people around her or feel secure in her own skin. Her dark mother humor was so relatable, her love for her family tainted by fears and judgments extremely self aware and honest.

I found as the book reached its climax, some of the internal dialogue briefly lost my attention, but I was pulled right back in for an ending well worth the listen.

The closer horror gets to our experienced reality, the more terrifying it becomes. In the likeness of Toni Morrison, this book finds itself in the genre of truth telling horror that lifts the veil of cultural blindness toward women, children (any undervalued group) and shows us the monstrousness of human violence— the trauma teeth it creates.

Moulton and her “magnificent monsters”

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