Showing posts with label cosmic horror. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cosmic horror. Show all posts

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Why Death of Heaven Is a Horror Enthusiast's Must Read and Earning Critical Attention

Every writer hopes their work finds the readers who understand what they set out to do. This past year has shown me that Death of Heaven is doing exactly that. The book continues to receive recognition from reviewers, literary organizations, and award panels that understand and appreciate ambitious horror that pushes beyond the usual boundaries of genre.

Art by Marvin Hayes

Below are some of the strongest reactions from professional reviewers, along with the a7wards that have helped bring the novel to a wider audience.


What Reviewers Are Saying

Critics across multiple platforms have responded to the book’s depth, structure, and emotional impact. These remarks reflect what readers often tell me: that Death of Heaven is not a conventional horror novel. It asks something of the reader and gives something back in return.

“Murdock does not think outside the box: he IS outside the box.”

Reader Views

“A fascinating, deeply philosophical and psychological piece of science fiction and horror.”

Reader Views

“Brutally honest and thoughtful, filled with immensely creative ideas and darkly fascinating narratives.”

Literary Titan

“Death of Heaven is a well-crafted horror story with a powerful literary voice that keeps you on edge.”

Readers’ Favorite

“A unique blend of sci-fi, horror, and metaphysical concepts that challenge the reader at every turn.”

Literary Titan

These comments have been especially meaningful because they capture the exact balance I worked to achieve. Horror mixed with philosophy. Cosmic-scale ideas mixed with personal tragedy. Childhood memory laid next to the darkest corners of existence.


Recognition and Awards

In 2024, Death of Heaven received honors that reflect the growing appreciation for its ambition and originality.

Winner, 2024 Literary Titan Book Award

Finalist, 2024 American Legacy Book Awards

Awards matter not for vanity, but because they help serious readers find books that take risks. I am grateful for that recognition, and grateful to the readers who champion the kind of story that refuses to fit neatly into any one category.



Death of Heaven began as an exploration of innocence, memory, and the strange fragility of the world as we believe it to be. The story of James and Jimmy, two boys chasing treasure and possibility, feels almost mythic in its simplicity. That childhood moment becomes the anchor of everything that follows. Their small, private adventure echoes across the rest of the book like a distant bell, because once the veil lifts and the horror arrives, the reader realizes what the boys could never know.
 
The thing waiting beneath the surface was never a monster that could be understood or fought. It was the universe itself, revealing its true face. What makes the novel unsettling is not the presence of horror but the absence of safety, the dawning recognition that the comforting structures of belief, memory, and morality are not shields but illusions.

As the narrative unfolds into multiple perspectives, documents, revelations, and moments of metaphysical shock, the story becomes less about creatures or cataclysm and more about the collapse of certainty itself. The characters are not battling evil in the traditional sense; they are trying to comprehend the implications of a cosmos that may be indifferent or outright malevolent.
 
Religion, science, childhood nostalgia, even love and friendship become threads woven into something larger, darker, and strangely beautiful. The horror arises from the recognition that meaning might be a human invention, and yet the search for meaning continues anyway. That tension is the heart of the book.
 
Death of Heaven is not only a story about apocalypse. It is a story about how we face the shattering of the stories we tell ourselves, and what remains when the last comforting narrative is stripped away.


Closing Thoughts

Death of Heaven is a novel for readers who want horror with emotional resonance, philosophical weight, and narrative experimentation. The reviews and awards above tell me the book is doing exactly what I hoped it would. It challenges, unsettles, and lingers.

If you have read the book, thank you. If you have not and are curious, I invite you to step inside and see what you discover.

DEATH OF HEAVEN


Cheers! Sláinte! Na zdravie!


Compiled with aid of ChatGPT

Wednesday, June 25, 2025

Walking the Edge: From the Novella ANDREW to the Award-Winning Novel DEATH OF HEAVEN

In writing Death of Heaven (2024 NYC Big Book Award for Horror), I wasn’t seeking to simply tell a horror story — I was trying to illuminate something deeper, more universal. This novel walks a knife-edge between the deeply personal and the disturbingly cosmic, between lyrical introspection and the brutal realities of madness, violence, and transformation. It’s a story rooted in terror, yes — but also in beauty, memory, and the fragile thread that ties us to meaning.

Andrew - Cover for Audiobook

The prose itself mirrors this tension. Rather than relying solely on plot or shock, Death of Heaven invites the reader into an atmosphere — a psychological landscape where dread lingers like fog and revelation arrives not with clarity, but with a kind of haunted grace.

One passage captures this tone clearly: a character, wrapped in uncertainty and fear, quietly contemplates whether a particular place might be “a good place to die.” It’s not a melodramatic moment. It’s quiet. Still. And in that stillness, the richness of the world presses in — the textures of the scene made more vivid by the weight of the question. That’s where the novel lives: in the collision between the horror of the question and the beauty of the world that dares to exist anyway.

This juxtaposition — despair and transcendence — recurs throughout the novel. My characters don’t simply face danger; they engage with it on a soul-deep level. They wrestle with questions of identity, mortality, memory, and fate. The horror is never just external — it’s mirrored in the psyche, in the ghosts of trauma, in the invisible architecture of guilt and belief.

Consider the line: “A dark character rode my mind, I knew that. A dark rider who made no compromise and rode in ways both surreal and inexplicable.” That’s not just a metaphor — it’s a lived experience for the character, and a reflection of something we all understand: the internalized presence of something we can’t always name, but that shapes our actions, our fears, our dreams.

And yet, for all its weight, there’s also absurdity. Life, even in its most grotesque moments, has a strange and terrible irony. The randomness of survival. The strangeness of fate. The tragic comedy of being alive while others fall. These elements find their way into the prose — not as relief, but as perspective. A way to acknowledge that the world is both more beautiful and more indifferent than we’d like to believe.

Death of Heaven is not an easy story. It wasn’t meant to be. But in its pages, I hope readers will find something they recognize — not just in the characters, but in the spaces between the words. In the quiet dread. In the sharp beauty. In the feeling that something just out of reach is watching, whispering, waiting.

That’s the line this book walks. And maybe, in some way, that’s the line we all walk.

Andrew ebook cover

Literary Echoes: Authors Who Walk Similar Lines

Authors who successfully navigate a nuanced balance between darkness and beauty, akin to what I aimed for in Death of Heaven, include both contemporary and classic figures known for exploring existential themes, surrealism, and macabre insight.

Jeff Lindsay, for example, creates in the Dexter series a compelling dance between violent urges and internal ethics. His character Dexter Morgan reflects deeply on the nature of good and evil — often with a voice both introspective and darkly amused. That moral tension, laced with unease and even humor, echoes the atmospheric duality I pursue: unsettling, yet strangely human.

Margaret Atwood, particularly in The Handmaid’s Tale, captures dystopia with a tone of ironic resilience. Her characters, even in the bleakest scenarios, find subtle acts of defiance and insight. I find resonance in how she frames oppression and madness without losing a thread of philosophical reflection — a quality I strive to capture in my own depictions of internal collapse and existential tension.

Haruki Murakami drapes his surreal narratives in existential mist. Novels like Kafka on the Shore blur the boundaries of reality and thought, offering philosophical weight under dreamlike logic. His ability to marry quiet beauty with grotesque imagery inspires a similar balance in my writing — one where the reader feels both untethered and introspective.

Neil Gaiman, in works like American Gods, layers myth onto modernity. His characters inhabit fantastical realities grounded in very human confusion — belief, purpose, and self-identity. In Death of Heaven, I also strive to explore the sacred and profane, often through surreal or seemingly mythic frameworks, filtered through very real emotions.

Flannery O’Connor’s Southern Gothic tales are studies in contradiction. Her dark humor undercuts the grotesque, and her characters’ suffering is interwoven with themes of grace, sin, and redemption. Her influence is felt in how I frame moments of horror not as ends in themselves, but as revelations — uncomfortable, absurd, yet meaningful.


Lessons From the Literary Shadows

From these authors, I draw several inspirations and affirmations:

  • Intricate Characterization: Like Lindsay and O'Connor, I seek to build characters who hold contradictions — haunted, hopeful, brutal, and tender — so that their struggles echo our own.

  • Balance of Tones: Inspired by Murakami and Gaiman, I allow beauty and terror to coexist, letting dark situations reveal strange wonders, and gentle moments carry unsettling truths.

  • Philosophical Depth: As with Atwood, I believe horror and reflection must walk hand in hand — not to deliver answers, but to provoke better questions.

Death of Heaven is my own contribution to this lineage of unsettling yet reflective storytelling — a place where the abyss stares back, but where the sky, too, can open with light.

From Andrew to Death of Heaven: The Evolution of a Cosmic Struggle

Before Death of Heaven, there was Andrew (audiobook) — a novella born from a simple but haunting premise: a child burdened by trauma, navigating a world that refuses to see the depth of his inner reality. Andrew explores the profound isolation of a boy whose emotional and intellectual complexity is invisible to those around him. The story’s heart lies in his yearning for recognition, identity, and meaning — not just from others, but from the universe itself.

The audiobook is read by AI. I chose AI narration for this audiobook as an experiment in emerging technology. I wanted to explore how far voice synthesis has come—and the result? Surprisingly immersive and emotionally resonant. While it’s not a substitute for a seasoned voice actor, it brings a clean, consistent performance that lets the story shine without distraction. I do prefer live actors and have used them for my various projects. This was an interesting test of the product itself—specifically to gauge how readers and listeners would respond to an AI-narrated audiobook in terms of quality, accessibility, and engagement. It's been interesting.

That intimate struggle for self-understanding becomes the foundation for the broader existential crisis in Death of Heaven. While Andrew grapples with confusion and emotional fragmentation on a personal level, Death of Heaven scales those questions to a cosmic plane. The same themes — identity, perception, transformation, and the tension between the visible and unseen — reappear, but now through characters confronting not only their own trauma, but the unraveling of reality itself.

In Death of Heaven, the central tenet expands: it becomes the struggle between existential forces and the search for meaning amid chaos. Characters tied to the enigmatic Tiny Colony and SoulHeart initiative face overwhelming darkness — from within and beyond. The looming force of The Shade symbolizes a cosmic erasure, threatening not just lives, but the very meaning of existence. And yet, much like Andrew, these characters persist in their need to be known, to reclaim identity, and to hold onto a sense of unity despite fragmentation.

Together, Andrew and Death of Heaven form a philosophical continuum. Andrew is the seed — raw, personal, and intimate. Death of Heaven is the full bloom — vast, mythic, and world-shaking. Yet both ask the same question in different voices: Who are we when the world no longer reflects us?

And both suggest the same answer — that recognition, understanding, and the stubborn flicker of hope are not luxuries of peace, but necessities for surviving the dark.

In the end, Death of Heaven isn’t just a descent into darkness — it’s a search for meaning within it. I’ve never been interested in tidy resolutions. What moves me — and what moves the characters in both stories — are the honest confrontations. What does it mean to survive? To remember? To carry beauty through ruin?

These are the questions my characters face, and perhaps the ones we all do. If you find yourself drawn to stories that don’t flinch from the void but still manage to find a flicker of light within it — then maybe you’ve already walked part of the path this book follows.

Welcome.



Compiled with aid of ChatGPT and MyReader AI



Tuesday, June 17, 2025

Echoes in the Temple: Thought, Deity, and the Hollow Mind

It struck me—like a whisper sliding through the ribs of silence—we don’t just have thoughts. We hear them. As if something is speaking in that cavern behind our eyes. Our own voice, yes, but distant. Not quite tethered. Like it came from a room down the hall that shouldn’t exist.


That alone might explain God.

Not the God of stained glass and parental commandments. I mean the idea—older than names, older than fire—of something vast and watching. The invisible presence in the trees, in the dark, in the folds of our own breath. We think we looked out and found God. But what if the first real encounter was inward? What if the divine began not in the heavens but in the hollow theater of the human skull?

Because if you sit long enough with your own mind, if you listen without distraction, the space inside doesn’t feel small. It expands. It echoes. It responds. We tell ourselves this is normal—this inner narrator, this unseen scribe. But anyone with even a cracked sense of self knows how strange it really is. Thoughts appear fully formed, dressed in voice and timing. Insights arrive like gifts from behind the curtain. Sometimes they shout. Sometimes they whisper. Sometimes they warn.

That eerie duality—of being both the speaker and the spoken-to—might be the oldest haunting we know. Before we carved gods into stone or sketched stars into myths, we already had a voice in our heads. It wasn’t always kind. It wasn’t always sane. But it was there. And when the dark pressed in at the edges of the firelight, what else could it have been but something more?

Maybe that was the first altar: the quiet inner chamber of thought, echoing with something too complex, too alien to be merely "me."

It’s not hard to see the roots of cosmic horror in that. The unknowable pressing in—not from galaxies far beyond, but from within the skull. A presence that isn’t separate from us, but generated by us. Or worse, residing in us. An invader mistaken for a conscience. A parasite that speaks in familiar tones. The divine not as savior, but as stowaway.

Perhaps God was never in the sky. Perhaps the real abyss is between our thoughts.

And many of us have been praying into it ever since.

But perhaps there are no gods at all—only the mind, inventing echoes to fill the silence. Maybe the divine is merely the byproduct of our terror at being alone in the dark. Something banal, draped in the sacred. Something hollow we mistook for holy, going all the way back to when we clung to branches in the blackness of a moonless night, staring into the void between trees and praying—not that something was out there, but that if there was, it meant us no harm.

Much of this line of thought has echoed through my own writing in speculative fiction and horror. The idea that what we fear most might not be what lies beyond us, but what originates within—that the divine, the monstrous, and the imagined might all share a single root in the architecture of our minds.

It's a rich, unsettling territory I've returned to again and again: the hollow space we fill with gods, ghosts, and meaning, just to silence the echo.


Compiled with aid of ChatGPT

Thursday, June 5, 2025

Death of Heaven: A Horror Novel No One Saw Coming

When Horror Isn’t Just Scary—It’s Meaningful: Why Death of Heaven Should Be Your Next Read

Winner of the 2024 NYC Big Book Award for Horror, a finalist in the American Legacy Book Awards, and now up for the 2025 Readers' Favorite Award (2024 winners, see their review here)—this isn’t your average fright fest. It’s a literary tripwire, ready to jolt you awake.

If the cover throws you off, good—you’re already deep in a story that vanishes mid-sentence and ends in someone else’s memory.


Death of Heaven isn’t what you expect—it’s far worse. And far beyond that..

Check out some of the reviews:

For a critical analysis of all my writings:

However, if horror disturbs you, try something gentler. Like Anthology of Evil II Vol. II The Unwritten


Or if you prefer short stories... Anthology of Evil II Vol. I


Look Again At The Cover of Death of Heaven. It Says More Than You Think.

The cover of Death of Heaven often surprises people—and that’s by design. Created by the extraordinary artist Marvin Hayes, it’s not just a spooky or surreal image slapped on a horror book. If you look closely, really study it, you'll see layers of meaning—symbolism that ties directly into the themes of the stories inside.

Like the book itself, the cover rewards attention. What might first appear abstract or unsettling is actually a carefully constructed visual riddle—hinting at memory, duality, madness, and the fragile nature of what we call "reality."

For those expecting a typical horror read, the cover might feel unfamiliar. But Death of Heaven is not a typical horror book. It’s lyrical, philosophical, and unflinching in the way it pulls back the curtain on the hidden horrors of life. Marvin Hayes captured that beautifully, in a way that’s meant to intrigue, not mislead.

So if you're unsure? Look again. There’s more waiting beneath the surface—on the cover and in every page.

What if the horror you fear most isn’t the monster in the shadows, but the truths hiding in plain sight? In Death of Heaven, JZ Murdock invites readers into a deeply unsettling universe where childhood trauma, cosmic terror, and existential dread collide.

More Than a Horror Story—A Literary Experience

For fans of Clive Barker's Books of Blood, Death of Heaven echoes with that same raw energy—a series of intertwined tales that lure you in with poignancy and beauty, only to twist suddenly into something far more disturbing. But Murdock's work does more than mimic a genre master. As reviewers have noted, his prose carries a poetic weight, pulling literary readers into the fold just as effectively as horror purists.

This isn’t horror for the sake of shock—this is horror that dares you to feel, think, and question.

The Art of Emotional Ambush

One of the book’s most compelling qualities is its ability to draw you in with a sense of safety, only to shatter it when you least expect it. These aren’t stories built solely on gore or jump scares—they’re constructed like psychological puzzles, slowly turning the screw until you're completely immersed and unnerved. And that’s the magic of Death of Heaven: its horror doesn’t just live in the supernatural, but in the all-too-human moments where things go quietly, horrifyingly wrong.

For marketing, this emotional ambush can be its greatest weapon. Campaigns built around “what you don’t see coming” or “the horror that hides in plain sight” can evoke powerful curiosity. And with every twist, readers feel more invested, even haunted, long after they’ve closed the book.

A Novel That Defies Categorization—and That’s the Point

Death of Heaven isn’t content to stay in one lane. The novel weaves together multiple stories, voices, and tones—sometimes lyrical, sometimes gritty, always surprising. Think of it as literary horror’s answer to a Jackson Pollock painting: messy, deliberate, and mesmerizing. It’s the kind of book that rewards readers who enjoy exploring the edges of genre, who crave originality and depth.

For indie readers, horror aficionados, and fans of the avant-garde, this book is a perfect match.

Building the Cult Following It Deserves

Here’s where the real power of Death of Heaven lies: community. Through platforms like Goodreads, Reddit’s horror lit communities, and author-driven Facebook pages, Murdock’s audience has the chance to grow organically through reader engagement and discussion. Promoting questions like, “Which story haunted you most?” or “When did you realize things were going wrong?” creates an interactive pull that goes beyond the book—it becomes a shared experience.

Social media campaigns should focus on connection over conversion. That means sharing quotes from reviews, highlighting reader responses, and even running polls or contests to engage people on a deeper level. TikTok horror book reviewers, dark lit YouTubers, and Facebook horror groups are fertile ground for this kind of literary engagement.

Death of Heaven is more than a portmanteau novel—it’s a conversation about fear, morality, reality, and the boundaries of genre. A portmanteau novel is a work of fiction made up of multiple interconnected short stories or narratives that combine to form a cohesive whole. The term is used similarly to a portmanteau film—think Cloud Atlas, Books of Blood, or The Illustrated Man by Ray Bradbury.

This collection of interconnected stories or narratives, has overlapping characters, themes, or framing elements.

  • A literary structure that blends different styles or genres under one roof (e.g., horror, speculative fiction, psychological drama).

  • A nonlinear or layered format that invites the reader to connect pieces across different parts of the book.

In this sense, portmanteau fiction is often used in film and literature to describe a work like Books of Blood or Trick ‘r Treat (in film), where smaller stories build toward a larger impression or meaning.

Whether you’re a horror fanatic or a curious literary explorer, Murdock’s work will shake something loose in you.

Don’t just read horror. Experience it.

👉 Available now wherever books are sold. Like here.

Think you know horror? Think again. Death of Heaven changes everything.

Fade. Blue. And Chaos.
Some of the Travellers
Of the Tiny Colony of the Mirea.
Of the Soulheart Colony

Monday, May 12, 2025

Facing the Darkness: "Death of Heaven" Receives 5-Star Praise from Readers’ Favorite

 It’s always gratifying when a story you’ve lived with, wrestled over, and finally released into the wild finds a reader who gets it. That happened recently with a new review of Death of Heaven from Keana Sackett-Moomey at Readers’ Favorite, who honored the book with a glowing 5-star rating.

Keana writes:

“JZ Murdock's Death of Heaven is an exciting combination of science fiction, mainstream horror, cosmic mysticism, and unique storytelling... It is nearly impossible to put the book down due to its pulsating action and tension, vivid characters withstanding trauma, and sensational feats of imagination.”

That kind of response hits home—especially for a book like Death of Heaven, which never set out to be easy. The story follows two childhood friends, Jimmy and James, whose lives splinter after a traumatic event. One becomes a protector, serving his country in Special Ops. The other spirals inward, battling darkness that may not be entirely his own. Their reunion isn’t just a personal reckoning—it becomes a journey into the foundations of existence, faith, and fate itself.

Told across interwoven narratives and short stories, Death of Heaven explores the terrifying origins of humanity and the forces that may lie behind the curtain of our shared reality. Readers of Dead Silence and The Luminous Dead will feel at home in this chilling universe—but no one gets out unscathed.

“Murdock skillfully crafts an immersive world that blurs the lines between philosophical intrigue and sheer terror,” the review continues. “He explores topics like religion, human nature, and the concept of right and wrong in a shocking, realistic, and imaginative way.”

I wrote this book not just to entertain (though I hope it does), but to dig into uncomfortable truths:

  • What if what we call “God” isn’t what we think it is?
  • What if we’re not ready to know?
  • If we were—would we survive it?
  • What if our history as a species is built on falsehoods—so far beyond anything we ever imagined—that the truth would drive us mad, tear the fabric of our reality, and force us to confront powers older than time itself… watching, waiting, and wishing to return?

  • What if those forces had enemies—greater powers even they feared... and hid from?
  • And what if those greater forces, one day… arrived?

If you’re a fan of horror that dares to be cerebral, speculative fiction that’s unafraid of existential dread, or simply want to see what happens when friendship collides with revelation, I invite you to take the plunge.

Read the full review here:

📖 Readers’ Favorite Review – Death of Heaven

And if you’ve already taken the journey—thank you. Please share with others and I’d love to hear what you saw on the way down.


Compiled with aid of ChatGPT