When a quiet Englishman nearing sixty rents out the spare room in his two-bedroom house, he expects little more than extra income and a bit of company. Instead, he meets Anke-a reserved German woman in her forties, polite, observant, and unnervingly silent. She moves through the house without sound. She appears in doorways without warning. And she has an unusual fondness for cats.
At first, the signs are easy to dismiss: strange noises at night, unfamiliar smells, the unsettling sense of being watched. But soon, stray cats begin to appear inside the house-then more of them. The lodger insists they are only visitors. She insists they feel safe there.
As the house grows increasingly occupied, its boundaries begin to shift. The man finds himself questioning his memory, his autonomy, even the shape of his own body. What began as a simple lodging arrangement becomes something far more intimate and inescapable, as the house itself seems to respond to the quiet invasion.
The Spare Room is a slow-burn psychological horror novel about loneliness, politeness, and the danger of giving up space too easily. Unsettling, claustrophobic, and quietly devastating, it explores what happens when a home stops being a refuge-and starts choosing who belongs inside it.