A haunting tale of isolation and quiet unease by Mary Elizabeth Counselman, blending speculative suggestion with psychological tension.
In Way Station, Counselman crafts a compact narrative in which ordinary surroundings gradually reveal deeper strangeness. The story unfolds with measured restraint, allowing atmosphere and implication to carry the weight of its speculative premise. As the familiar begins to shift, the boundary between safety and uncertainty grows increasingly fragile.
Known for her ability to fuse subtle horror with emotional realism, Counselman avoids spectacle in favor of mood. Her prose is controlled and deliberate, drawing readers into an intimate encounter with the uncanny. Way Station reflects the mid-century tradition of science fiction and dark fantasy that focused less on machinery and more on human vulnerability in the face of the unknown.
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