In The Scarlet Division, Wes Jaques (with Ash Robicheaux and Jake Bannerman's shadowy assist) unfurls a crimson-threaded nightmare disguised as a declassified dossier, where Nazi banners aren't mere symbols of hate but sentient relics woven from "post-organic" pigments-hemoglobin hymns and Leidensfarbe spells that bleed through history's seams, refusing to fade like the Reich's scrubbed sins. Blending the archival paranoia of House of Leaves with the bureaucratic dread of SCP containment logs, Jaques transforms a grad student's dusty Bundesarchiv find into a labyrinth of vanishing seamstresses, eye-gouging posters, and museums that "infect" rather than educate, all pulsing with the visceral horror of aesthetics turned weapon: red not as color, but as collective trauma stored in silk, whispering "Do you see us now?" from quarantined vaults. It's a taut, 10-chapter descent into the "Vermilion Protocol," where IG Farben's real chemical atrocities (Zyklon B echoes, verified in declassified OSS memos) mutate into supernatural sigils-handprint signatures that warp glass and summon phantom nosebleeds-culminating in an epilogue that meta-stains the reader as accomplice. Unsettlingly plausible fiction that lingers like rust in your veins, this 2025 Horror Ink gem earns 4.8/5 scorched swastikas for its refusal to let evil's artistry die quietly, proving once again that the past doesn't haunt; it curates your next scream.
ThriftBooks sells millions of used books at the lowest
everyday prices. We personally assess every book's quality and offer rare, out-of-print treasures. We
deliver the joy of reading in recyclable packaging with free standard shipping on US orders over $15.
ThriftBooks.com. Read more. Spend less.