"The 25 Best and Most Anticipated Horror Books of 2025." —Men's Health"An intriguing horror novel that tackles a serious subject, 8114 has a lot of potential among 2025's new horror releases." —Screen Rant"8114 promises to put [Hull's] spin on the perennially popular small town with dark secrets subgenre of horror... Hull’s success with stories like Glorious and Mouth proves that he knows how to find every narrow passageway hidden within a concept." —Paste"For those who loved the entrenched evil of The Good House (2003), by Tananarive Due, the cursed-media, small-town horror of Universal Harvester (2017), by John Darnielle, or the unsettling verisimilitude of The Ghost That Ate Us (2022), by Daniel Kraus." —Booklist"A psychological horror wrapped tightly around a supernatural core making it impossible to put down." —Capes and Tights"Drawing on a screenwriting pedigree, Hull crafts a hauntingly cinematic horror experience—where simmering psychological dread meets spectral mystery, pulling you deep into a world you won’t soon escape." —Cinema Chords"Reading Joshua Hull's grief-rot-opera 8114 is akin to uncovering that lost VHS tape at the far back of the Blockbuster video, all scuzzed up with nowhere to go but straight into the cassette player of your brain. This is opaque horror, this is black mold horror, this is the hole at the center of Hull's own heart and it's swallowed me up." —Clay McLeod Chapman, author of Wake Up and Open Your Eyes“8114 is a speeding car with no brakes on a road going straight into Hell. A brutal tale of how narcissism and ego in today’s technology-driven world can conjure the very worst kinds of evil, then give it a microphone.” —Philip Fracassi, author of Boys in the Valley"Dripping with guilt and grief, heartbreak and hope, Joshua Hull has achieved something special here, a blend of the haunted self and the haunted house narrative. 8114 leaves a mark, a scar that will leave readers lost in thought, reflecting on the authenticity of their own memories." —Michael J. Seidlinger, author of Anybody Home? and The Body Harvest“Surprising and relentless, Joshua Hull’s 8114 is an absolute banger of a novel. Few writers can induce nervous laughter while scaring the pants off readers, but Hull absolutely excels at it. 8114 is a macabre blast of cinematic horror!” —Jonathan Janz, author of Veil and Marla"8114 is a book that will worm its way beneath your skin, seeping into your veins until you're firmly in its clutches with no escape." —Jenny Kiefer, This Wretched Valley