Kate’s Review: “Fiend”

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Book: “Fiend” by Alma Katsu

Publishing Info: G.P. Putnam’s Sons, September 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley.

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: Historical horror maven Alma Katsu turns her talents to the modern world for the first time, in this terrifying tale about an all-powerful family with an ancient evil under its thumb.

Imagine if the Sackler family had a demon at their beck and call.

The Berisha family runs one of the largest import-export companies in the world, and they’ve always been lucky. Their rivals suffer strokes. Inconvenient buildings catch on fire. Earthquakes swallow up manufacturing plants, destroying harmful evidence. Things always seem to work outfor the Berishas. They’re blessed.

At least that is what Zef, the patriarch, has always told his three children. And each of them knows their place in the family—Dardan, as the only male heir, must prepare to take over as keeper of the Berisha secrets, Maris’s most powerful contribution, much to her dismay, will be to marry strategically, and Nora’s job, as the youngest, is to just stay out of the way. But when things stop going as planned, and the family blessing starts looking more like a curse, the Berishas begin to splinter, each hatching their own secret scheme. They didn’t get to be one of the richest families in the world without spilling a little blood, but this time, it might be their own.

Review: Thank you to NetGalley for sending me an eARC of this novel!

I’ve been a fan of Alma Katsu for a good number of years now, always impressed with her historical fiction novels and how she can take real life events and bring in some strange supernatural elements that send chills down my spine. It has been a few years since she has written a full novel, and imagine my surprise when not only did she have a new novel coming out, it was going to be set in modern times! Unexpected! But reading about “Fiend”, it kind of made sense why she wanted to have it take place in the present, as the themes, although timeless, have an extra oomph in a time where billionaires are taking advantage of other people and causing lots of pain with few consequences (I suppose this also could have been a Gilded Age theme, but oh well). And since it’s Katsu, we gotta have SOMETHING spooky. And in “Fiend”, a greedy corporate family of billionaires have a supernatural presence at their beck and call to fulfill many a whim.

Overall, I did enjoy this book. I am always here for a book about nasty billionaires getting their comeuppance, and the Berisha Family definitely has shades of the Roys in “Succession” meets the Ushers from Mike Flanagan’s “The Fall of the House of Usher”. We have the patriarch Zef, who is trying to figure out who is going to take over once he has passed on, his traditionalist values leaning towards his son Dardan even though middle child Maris is probably the most qualified (with youngest Nora just kind of in the wings doing her own thing). The family is filled with pretty nasty people, but as things start to go awry and Maris is trying her best to right the ship (though little appreciation is thrown her way), the family starts to fracture. And all of the ‘convenient’ ill fortunes thrown at their rivals starts to turn back on themselves. Katsu has written a shorter book her, and while that means it reads fast and the pace is quick, it does mean that we have a LOT of world building to do along with fully exploring a dysfunctional family line that’s falling towards ruin. Plot wise, I kind of wish we had more mythos and building blocks regarding what, exactly, has been helping this family for so many years, especially as the being starts to seemingly go rogue. We do find out, but I wanted more exploration of it.

But as a family drama? I really enjoyed it. We have Kef, who is such a dick who has pigeonholed his kids into roles that they don’t really want while also stoking rivalries that can ebb and flow depending on what each sibling wants. We have Dardan, who knows that the weight of the world is going to be on his shoulders, though he also knows that he probably can’t hack it at the end of the day. We have Maris, who is VERY competent but is a girl, who then takes out her frustrations of those weaker than her. And we have Nora, who is discounted as the youngest and also a girl, but wants to be more than the ruthless Berishas that they have always been. I really liked the family dynamics and seeing all of the siblings try to maneuver through the entire mess as it unfolds. And as I mentioned above multiple times: the horrible billionaires causing pain and misfortune to line their own pockets? That feels rather apt.

“Fiend” is another enjoyable book from Alma Katsu! I’m so happy she has come back with another novel!

Rating 8: “Fiend” will fill that void that “Succession” left, especially if you wanted the Roys to have a little more supernatural punishment thrown their way.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Fiend” is included on the Goodreads list “Horror to Look Forward To in 2025”.

One thought on “Kate’s Review: “Fiend””

  1. I just finished this last night, and you pretty much summed up my thoughts. I was expecting more of the demon, to be honest, so that was a little disappointing. But the family drama was on point!

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