In the Dolomites, the mountain stops sounding like itself before anyone understands why. When strange blue-white lights begin descending over Val di Fanes, animals go silent, radios speak in stolen voices, and familiar people start returning to the village with something subtly wrong inside their faces. Dr. Marta Bellini, already trapped in the valley by her father Alessio's decline, is among the first to understand that this is not weather, mass panic, or military intrusion. Something has arrived from above and is learning humanity by imitation. It studies voices, copies the dead, rewrites behavior, and moves through the village by turning ordinary hospitality, ritual, and trust into an access point.
What begins as alpine unease widens into a terrifying local occupation. The visitors do not simply infiltrate bodies. They tune the valley itself. Gianni's lodge, Father Luca's church, the dam, the glacial lake, the shrine routes, even Marta's clinic become parts of a larger pattern being imposed on the land like a celestial machine. As copied neighbors multiply and the human community begins to fracture under fear, Marta discovers that old mountain rules still matter: lies shared through food open doors, open flame reveals what hides beneath skin, names cannot be stolen cleanly, and dissonance can wound what harmony helps sustain.
By the novel's final movement, the struggle becomes more than survival. The valley has been converted into an instrument meant to receive and amplify what is descending from the sky, and stopping it demands terrible choices. Flood, noise, sacrifice, and the strange gift of a child's perfectly dissonant voice all become part of a last defense against total occupation. The Skyward Visitors is a psychological and cosmic invasion horror novel about mimicry, landscape, stolen identity, and the terror of realizing that the most dangerous thing an enemy can learn is how to sound like home.