Act of God Audiobook By Jill Ciment cover art

Act of God

A Novel

Preview
Get this deal Try for $0.00
Offer ends January 21, 2026 11:59pm PT
Prime logo Prime members: New to Audible? Get 2 free audiobooks during trial.
Just $0.99/mo for your first 3 months of Audible Premium Plus.
1 audiobook per month of your choice from our unparalleled catalog.
Listen all you want to thousands of included audiobooks, podcasts, and Originals.
Auto-renews at $14.95/mo after 3 months. Cancel anytime.
Pick 1 audiobook a month from our unmatched collection.
Listen all you want to thousands of included audiobooks, Originals, and podcasts.
Access exclusive sales and deals.
Premium Plus auto-renews for $14.95/mo after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Act of God

By: Jill Ciment
Narrated by: Barbara Rosenblat
Get this deal Try for $0.00

$14.95/mo after 3 months. Cancel anytime. Offer ends January 21, 2026 11:59pm PT.

$14.95/month after 30 days. Cancel anytime.

Buy for $13.50

Buy for $13.50

LIMITED TIME OFFER | Get 3 months for $0.99 a month

$14.95/mo thereafter-terms apply.
Jill Ciment’s books have been hailed as “stunning,” “powerful,” and “provocative.” Alice Sebold has called her works “beautifully written.” Now the author of Heroic Measures (“Smart and funny and completely surprising . . . I loved every page.” —Ann Patchett; “Brave, generous, nearly perfect.” —Los Angeles Times) has given us a contemporary noir novel that starts out a comedy of errors and turns darker at every hairpin turn.

It’s the summer of 2015, Brooklyn. The city is sweltering from another record-breaking heat wave, this one accompanied by biblical rains. Edith, a recently retired legal librarian, and her identical twin sister, Kat, a feckless romantic who’s mistaken her own eccentricity for originality, discover something ominous in their hall closet: it seems to be phosphorescent, it’s a mushroom . . . and it’s sprouting from their wall.

Upstairs, their landlady, Vida Cebu, a Shakespearian actress far more famous for her TV commercials for Ziberax (the first female sexual enhancement pill) than for her stage work, discovers that a petite Russian girl, a runaway au pair, has been secretly living in her guest room closet. When the police arrest the intruder, they find a second mushroom, also glowing, under the intruder’s bedding. Soon the HAZMAT squad arrives, and the four women are forced to evacuate the contaminated row house with only the clothes on their backs.

As the mold infestation spreads from row house to high-rise, and frightened, bewildered New Yorkers wait out this plague (is it an act of God?) on their city and property, the four women become caught up in a centrifugal nightmare.

Part horror story, part screwball comedy, Jill Ciment’s brilliant suspense novel looks at what happens when our lives—so seemingly set and ordered yet so precariously balanced—break down in the wake of calamity. It is, as well, a novel about love (familial and profound) and how it can appear from the most unlikely circumstances.
Crime Crime Fiction Genre Fiction Horror Literary Fiction Literature & Fiction Noir Scary Fiction Suspense Funny

People who viewed this also viewed...

The Body in Question Audiobook By Jill Ciment cover art
The Body in Question By: Jill Ciment
Heroic Measures Audiobook By Jill Ciment cover art
Heroic Measures By: Jill Ciment
All stars
Most relevant
An entertaining story with a fantastic narrator. Full of hijinks and comedy, this novel will make you laugh out loud on the train. Highly recommend.

Barbara Rosenblat is a STAR

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

The overall subject of this book intrigued me, but I was mistaken. Instead of the plot having the fungus grow to encompass the whole city, country, then the world, the book somehow finds a way to shrink the plot the closer it gets to the end.

Interspersed with the shrinking fungus plot is a book about acting and an actor, and also NYC. Not that there’s anything wrong with that, but this is not a book about fungus ending the world by any means. It could have been, but that’s obviously not what the author wanted to do.

It’s decently written and short enough that the shrinking plot wasn’t too painful, at least.

Growing fungus, shrinking plot

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.

I like this author but not this narrator, whom I've heard before. I think it spoiled the book for me. She was far too dramatic to my taste.

Not a Fan of Narrator

Something went wrong. Please try again in a few minutes.