Pearl
Pearl book cover

Pearl

Hardcover – October 12, 2021

Price
$16.99
Format
Hardcover
Pages
304
Publisher
Del Rey
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-0593237830
Dimensions
5.73 x 1.06 x 8.52 inches
Weight
13.4 ounces

Description

“Daring readers should find this tale of a malevolent telepathic pig to be a memorable experience.xa0. .xa0. The novel shares the same racing narrative that made Bird Box hard to put down and is Malerman’s most accomplished work outside of the Bird Box series.” — Booklist (starred review) “A perfect, fast-paced slasher filled with violent, cinematic action sequencesxa0. . . Malerman delivers with another completely different yet equally crowd-pleasing and awesome horror novel that is not to be missed.” — Library Journal (starred review) “A strange, un-put-down-ablexa0thriller . . . part twisted fairy tale, part animal rights protest, part PTSD drama, and part Triumph the Insult Dog, the novel never runs out of unsettling doors to open.” — Kirkus Reviews Josh Malerman is a New York Times bestselling author and one of two singer-songwriters for the rock band The High Strung. His debut novel, Bird Box , was the inspiration for the hit Netflix film of the same name. His other novels include Unbury Carol , Inspection , A House at the Bottom of a Lake , and Malorie , the sequel to Bird Box . Malerman lives in Michigan with his fiancée, the artist/musician Allison Laakko. Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved. Up Murdock, away from downtown Chowder, passing the wheat fields and the forest east of the road, tall pines that unfolded like a long, complex bedspread, separating Chowder from Goblin and the other less agricultural areas of mid-Michigan, they pulled onto Grandpa’s gravel drive just before noon. Sherry eyed Jeff briefly, checking to see if maybe he’d had a change of heart. If maybe he was smiling like he used to. Grandpa’s world was a fun world if you let it be. The farm. Where Jeff and Aaron used to ride the horses and chase chickens and oink at the pigs. Where the brothers spent nights outside, sometimes without a tent, sometimes just on their backs on the grassy slope that led from the farmhouse to the barn. This place was childhood. This place was supposed to be special. The farm meant something.“Doesn’t it?”Sherry hadn’t meant to say that out loud.“Doesn’t what?” Aaron asked. But Sherry didn’t answer. And Jeff stared at her like he might’ve known what she was thinking.Sherry parked the wagon by the front porch steps. She looked up to see Grandpa standing behind the screen door. He waved.“Hey, Dad,” Mom called from behind the rolled-up window.Grandpa waved again, as if maybe he’d forgotten he’d already done so.His thin white hair stirred with an easy autumn breeze. Sherry wondered what was on his mind, what clutter of his own.She and the boys got out of the car.“Hello, Sherry,” Grandpa said. “Hello, boys.” He looked tired. Sherry always said Grandpa was toughened by farm life. Jeff used to believe that.Sherry hugged him at the door.“Thought I’d put them to work today,” Grandpa said, nodding to the boys.“That sounds good,” Mom said. “They could use it.” And it would give her a chance to grovel in private.It had been a hard summer. Stuff it in the mind-bag. Yes. The mind-bag. The secret, unseen place where Sherry stuffed all her dark thoughts, her absurd worries, the unprovoked hunches she’d felt most her life, the premonitions of Pearl.Grandpa squinted down at his grandsons.“I was hoping Aaron could collect some eggs for me. And Jeff . . . maybe Jeff would like to feed the . . .”Jeff held his breath. Don’t say feed the pigs, Grandpa. Don’t say Pearl. And why not?“. . . horses,” Grandpa finished.Sherry smiled, but her own private stresses were drawn firmly on her face. Often she imagined the mind-bag hanging on a curled finger in an otherwise lightless room. A place only she could find it, hidden from the prying eyes of Chowder, Michigan, and the whole wide world beyond. But recently that bag had been relocated to her hip, a place anybody could see, if they cared to look. Yes, Sherry Kopple had started wearing her emotions on her sleeve, a look she didn’t quite love. Her recent anxiety stuck out like the stump of a third foot and was about as useful to boot.“How’s that sound, boys?” Grandpa asked. “Good enough?”The brothers nodded. Yes. Eggs and horses. Safe areas on the farm.Grandpa walked them into the farmhouse, through the kitchen, to the back door.Aaron followed Mom outside, a foot from the cellar door in the grass, but Jeff paused at the screen, looking down the slope to where the evergreens hid the pigpen.“The horses can’t come to you,” Grandpa said. And when Jeff looked up, he saw all three of them were waiting.Aaron laughed at him as he exited the farmhouse.Grandpa led him to the stables, and on the way, Jeff heard them breathing behind the trees.The pigs.The sound remained lodged in his mind, in his bones, as he passed them, loud, louder than the horses were, even when he stood inches from the muzzle of a mare.“This here’s their favorite,” Grandpa said, fishing a handful of damp, yellowing oats from a brown wooden trough. “But you gotta be a bit careful ’cause they’ll chew your fingers clean off.”Jeff looked up and saw Grandpa smiling, sadly, behind a show of white whiskers. His eyebrows had always remained dark as midnight, though.“Really?” Jeff asked.“No,” Grandpa said. “Not really. But it was fun to see the look on your face.”It felt good. Falling for a joke.Through the open door, Jeff saw Aaron eyeing the chicken coop, readying himself to pick some eggs.“Enjoy,” Grandpa said. “But don’t eat more than the horses.”Another joke. Good. Felt good.Then Grandpa left him alone in the stables. Jeff looked up, into the eyes of the brown horse he stood by.“Hello,” he said. “You hungry?”It felt good to talk. Felt good to pet the horse’s nose. To feel the strong neck and shoulders.“You remember me, right?” Jeff smiled at the horse. Wished it could smile back. “My name is—” Jeff . . . Jeff stepped quickly from the animal. The black emotional chasm that came with the sound of his name was wider, darker, deeper than any nightmare he’d known before. As if, in that moment, his ill-defined apprehensions about the farm had been galvanized, and everything Jeff was afraid of was true.He dropped a handful of grains and stepped farther from the mare. Wide-eyed, he stared at her, waiting to hear it again, waiting to hear his name spoken here in the stables.But the horse hadn’t said his name.“Mom?” he called, looking to the stable door. Come, Jeff. Jeff backed up to the stable wall.“Aaron? Are you screwing with me?”It could have been Aaron. It should have been Aaron.But Jeff knew it wasn’t.He folded his arms across his chest, combating a cold wind that passed through the stable. Come to me, Jeff . . . It sounded like the voice was traveling on the wind. Or like it was the wind. It was made of something his own voice didn’t have. He didn’t want to say what it really sounded like. Didn’t want to say it sounded like the voice was coming from outside the stables, up the hill, from the pigpen behind the trees.Jeff exited the stables, stood outside under the sun. Aaron was out of sight. Mom was probably in the farmhouse, talking to Grandpa.It wasn’t pretty, watching Mom beg for money. Jeff . . . It was coming from the evergreens. Jeff knew this now, could hear this now, and he wouldn’t have been shocked to see a farmhand peeking out between the branches using his pointer finger to beckon him closer. Jeff . . . come here . . . Without deciding to do it, Jeff took the dirt path to the trees. He crouched on one knee and split the branches. Through them, he saw the pigpen and the pigs lazing in the mud.Jeff stood up.He didn’t want to get any closer. Didn’t want to be alone out here at all.He ran up the grassy hill to the farmhouse. JEFF Louder now. Strong enough to root Jeff to the ground.He looked over his shoulder back to the hidden pigpen. Come, Jeff. Sing for me . . . Cautiously, Jeff walked back down the hill, to the end of the row of evergreens.Most the pigs were gathered together at the far side of the fence. One paced the length of the pen, bobbing his head, snorting, half covered in mud. It looked to Jeff as if he was thinking.Jeff looked back to the chicken coop. No Aaron. Still.When he turned back to the pen, Pearl was all he could see. Pearl. Sitting on his ass like a person might, his front hooves limp at the sides of his belly, his head was cocked slightly to the side, his pink ears straight, high above his head. His bad eye looked dark, hidden, but his good one was fixed on Jeff.In it, Jeff saw an intelligence that scared him.He didn’t think a pig could “stare” the same way a man did. Yet Pearl was tracking him, following his lead, as Jeff stepped slowly toward the pen.By the time he reached the gate, Jeff was breathing too hard. Felt like he’d done a lot of work. Felt like he’d unloaded a truckload of hay. Felt weak and skinny and cold and exposed and . . . Dumb, Jeff thought. Like he’s smarter than you. Yes, dumb . That was the worst of it. And Pearl, it seemed, knew it.A half smile appeared under the pig’s snout, or maybe it was just the way his lips naturally curled up at their ends.The pacing pig pissed, and it sounded like a hose shot at the mud.“Hello, Pearl,” Jeff said. He felt like he had to. Like it would have been insane not to—like he would have been admitting something too dark if he was too afraid to say hello to a pig.The other pigs seemed roused by Jeff’s voice. They shuffled in the mud, sat up. One lifted his head to get a better look.Jeff fingered the latch. Pearl watched him.Staring.Assessing. Planning? Read more

Features & Highlights

  • From Josh Malerman, the
  • New York Times
  • bestselling author of
  • Bird Box
  • and
  • Malorie,
  • comes the legend of Pearl, a strange new monster unlike any other in horror (previously published as
  • On This, the Day of the Pig
  • ).
  • NAMED ONE OF THE BEST BOOKS OF THE YEAR BY
  • THE WALL STREET JOURNAL
  • • “Daring readers should find this tale of a malevolent telepathic pig to be a memorable experience.”—
  • Booklist
  • (starred review)
  • There’s something strange about Walter Kopple’s farm. At first it seems to be his grandson, who cruelly murders one of Walter’s pigs in an act of seemingly senseless violence. But then people in town begin to whisper that Walter’s grandson heard a voice commanding him to kill.And that the voice belongs to a most peculiar creature: the pig named Pearl.Walter is not sure what to believe. He knows he’s always been afraid of the strangely malevolent Pearl. But as madness and paranoia grip the town and the townspeople descend on Walter’s farm with violent wrath, they begin to discover that true evil wears a human face.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(88)
★★★★
25%
(73)
★★★
15%
(44)
★★
7%
(21)
23%
(67)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Sing For Pearl

Where Malerman deserves the most credit with Pearl, formerly published as On This, The Day of the Pig, is in treading new ground in oft-trode horror subgenre of the creature feature. As per usual, Malerman writes a vehicle of pure imagination that couldn't have formed quite this way in any other writer's hands, yet eschews complex plot. Two words - telepathic pig. The eerie atmosphere that results and the carnage that comes to play complete the picture, making this Malerman's most straightforward (if such a thing can be said with a straight face) attempt at a classic horror story.
4 people found this helpful
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Be nice to pigs.

Malerman is one of my favorites when it comes to weird, offbeat, and allegorical horror. Pearl fits the bill with both weird and allegorical, and maybe we can add a bit of slasher in the mix, even though it’s nigh-impossible for a pig to cut and slash, isn’t it? Perhaps it is, in a normal world with a normal pig, but Malerman never writes normal worlds and Pearl certainly isn’t a normal pig. ⁣

The novel starts off strong, delivering readers right straight in to the antics of Pearl and the subsequent gore that sets the tone for the rest of the book. The entire story takes place within a few short days, and it’s one big ball of tension as readers wait and see who Pearl takes hold of next. The feeling that Pearl is incredibly powerful and has the means to be all-encompassing really oozed off the pages, and I felt like I was holding my breath for the majority of the book.⁣

Despite, or perhaps in spite of, Pearl’s bloodthirsty, ruthless demeanor, I couldn’t help but feel sympathy towards the murderous little pig and all he’s endured. Pigs are intelligent as it is, but Pearl’s intelligence far out-measures that of his piggy counterparts (and plenty of humans), and I think that’s truly what made him so fearsome. He was able to take his feelings and turn them into action, which isn’t anything worth writing home about until you take premeditation into consideration. A murderous pig who thinks and feels on the level of a human *and* can weigh and measure his actions beforehand? Yikes. ⁣

Pearl isn’t *just* a horror novel though. Instead, it’s horror with razor-sharp teeth that burrow into your brain and implant plenty of things to think about. There are several themes and allegories worth mulling over and discussing, and it’s definitely a tale I’ll be processing for quite a while. ⁣

Bottom line — be nice to pigs, they’re probably smarter than you. Also, read this because it’s fantastically weird and delightful.
3 people found this helpful
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Psychic Pig...

This is my first book by Josh Malerman and I was so excited to get into it because I was in the mood for dark and creepy!

Whoever was in charge of marketing this book is smart. So smart. After requesting this ARC that sounds delightfully, if vaguely, sinister and creepy, I found out it's a re-release of one of Malerman's older works called "On This, the Day of the Pig". If it had kept the same title, I never would have picked it up since I was not, and am still not after finishing the book, interested in telepathic killer pigs. I trudged through, thankful the book was only 304 pages.

This book feels like it's maybe edging on a message. Is it about humans treatment of farm animals, animal abuse, animal consumption? Is it about the law and "pigs" being in control? Is it about those "pigs" making you think you want to do what they say because they have the ultimate power? I truly don't know because no matter how close Malerman edges to a message, he really never makes it there and this just reads like a weird choice for a creepy story starring a animal.

I tried to read this straight through but one of my pig pet-peeves (ha) was the massive amounts of repetition. It was so annoying to read the same lines and thoughts over and over again. If I had to read that the pig "sat on his a**" again I might have screamed. The repetition, made up curses (pukin', etc.), and the weird almost stream of consciousness way this book was set up was very off-putting. The gross factor of bodies being described, fluids, etc. was obviously pointed but I tend to dislike gross horror so that didn't work for me either. Also, WHY was it necessary to include a cop that thought about m*sturbating to the idea of an 18-year-old girl LOOKING at him even though "he's not even into young girls". I really didn't like this book....

The only things I enjoyed about this book were the way Malerman brings in new characters, each one getting a back and forth of memories leading to how they are connected to Pearl, and how the book actually ended. The disquiet about being unsure what really happens in the end was interesting to me, though I'm not sure any of this book felt like actual horror to me.

I would recommend this book to people who like horror including animals or "gross" horror or other Josh Malerman books.

Thank you to NetGalley and Del Rey for my ARC!
3 people found this helpful
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Everyone can stop now. We’ve achieved peak weirdness.

(*I voluntarily read and reviewed an advance copy of this book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.*)

Hello my beloved nerdlings! Today is a great day for me, because there’s a Stephen King movie marathon on AMC. Yes, I know that I can stream everything, but you know something? I’m old enough to remember the days before streaming, before on-demand, and even before VCR’s. Back then, it was genuinely exciting for there to be a full day of good movies, and even commercials had their purpose. In those Olden Times, there was no pause button, so if you needed a snack or bathroom break, you waited for a commercial. Crazy, right? True, I’ll probably get annoyed with the ads soon, or want to watch something I haven’t already seen fifty times, but right now, I’m enjoying this the way I did as a kid. But with alcohol.

I’m taking advantage of the current commercial break to talk about the craziest book I’ve read in a bit. You guys, I usually write a marvelously clever plot description in this space, but when it comes to Pearl, I’m kind of at a loss, but I’ll give it a try. Pearl is a pig - not the kind who takes the last slice of cake at an office birthday party, or the guy who says he’ll call and never does. He’s got the pink skin and stubby snout and curly tail and all that. But Pearl is a little bit different. He’s also got one bad eye, and telepathy, and a big old grudge against humanity. So when he figures out that he can control humans’ brains, well, things can only go further into Crazytown from there.

And believe me, things move all the way into Crazytown and take up permanent residence real fast.

The good news, my beloved nerdlings, is that Pearl is hella fun. It’s got the goofy goriness of our favorite lesser-rated 80’s slashers, and some genuinely creepy moments besides. Pearl, as a character, is horrifying. The eye thing is freaky, and his memories as a piglet are deeply upsetting.

I’d also like to note that Pearl feels like a clever homage to Orwell’s classic Animal Farm, and I definitely can dig that.

I just wish the human characters had been better-developed. There’s the struggling single mom, the pretty high school cheerleader type girl, the outcast high school boys who call themselves Satanists but mostly just smoke a lot of weed, the big-business for a small-town bad guy who’s a dead ringer for Boss Hogg (heh). For all the glorious insanity of its premise, I’m not sure if Mr. Malerman was trying to write something genuinely scary & thought-provoking, or just a fun little throwback slasher cliche.

The Nerd’s Rating: FOUR HAPPY NEURONS (and some barbecue chicken, I’m never eating pork again.)
2 people found this helpful
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Sing for Pearl

I’m not sure if I have ever read something so unnerving. For some reason PEARL really got under my skin. I could use all the synonyms; disturbing, creepy, unsettling… it all boils down to feeling like I was being watched while I read this. Even in parts of the book where Pearl wasn’t around it felt like I was being scanned for any weakness that could be used against me later.
Originally published by Cemetery Dance under the name ON THIS, THE DAY OF THE PIG it parallels Animal Farm by George Orwell in only one aspect; humans have abused their power over animals for too long. Instead of the whole farm revolting, Malerman has one smart and vengeful pig…Pearl. Can you resist Pearl’s power?
Sing for me Brother Bookstagrammer, sing for Pearl.
1 people found this helpful
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Monsters Come In Many Forms!

People in town have always felt uncomfortable around Walter Koppel's farm especially around the pigs maybe one particular pig, Pearl. Pearl is a male pig and you would have to ask Walter why he named him Pearl and Pearl sits all day in his pen on his hind end, just like a chubby toddler boy with his front little legs just dangling in the air in front of him while it seems as if Pearl is just listening and watching, to who or what? Walter has no idea. What an unusual sight that is.

Walter's own daughter and grandson (Jeff) have always been very afraid of Pearl until the day Jeff decides to confront Pearl in the pen, instead he picks up an axe and kills the largest pig in the pen claiming a voice (Pearl?) told him to do it. Word spreads all over town and some teens are very curious and excited to see this talking pig and make plans to go out to the farm. Strange events have been occurring to many people who have had any interaction with this pig all leading up to a climatic ending. But for who? Humans or the animals, revenge or justice? You be the judge!

This story was a creepy and page-turning surprise. The excellent writing and storytelling had a tremendous amount of tension throughout the book. This was not a simple story of a telepathic pig as some reviews state, there is so much more backstory involved that will show again how "Humans are the real monsters" not some invisible boogeyman.
Pearl was born with a gift but did that make him evil? How did Pearl learn to use his gift and why were most the townspeople fearful of Walter's farm? Well, I'm not going to be the one to tell you. Horror readers: I highly recommend that you pick up this strange and creepy story to find out what nightmares are really made from and also, maybe, make you think twice the next time when you have your morning BACON!

I want to thank the author "Josh Malerman", the publisher "Random House Publishing-Ballantine" and Netgalley for the wonderful opportunity to read this terrific novel and any thoughts and opinions expressed are unbiased and mine alone!

I have given this eerie, horror book a rating of 4 1/2 DELICIOUSLY CREEPY 🌟🌟🌟🌟 STARS!!
1 people found this helpful
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Sing For Me Pearl!

I liked this story. It brought to mind Charlotte's Web and Animal Farm, only really seriously creepy. It was comical at times. I loved the characters, including Pearl and actually felt a little sorry for him in the way he was treated when he was tiny. I thought the story was interesting and enjoyed the location, including the town name of Chowder.
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Dreadfully amazing and exquisitely written

Great plot, very weird and original. The horror mirrors the oddity of the entire story. I loved reading this! Finished it in one setting and will reread. Not for everyone, but I appreciate the unsettling, horrifying and all around originality of this piece.
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BEWARE PEARL

What an absolutely terrifying ride this book was. Josh Malerman’s latest adventure takes the reader against one of the toughest villains to date - a telepathic murderous pig. Mixing both Animal Farm and serial killers, this book was a unique story that I really enjoyed. Pearl starts very quickly and keeps the read enthralled until the last page. However what is the truth and what was real for the characters, that is up to the reader to decide in some cases. I have never read a book like this before and would recommend it to those looking for a new nightmare to have!
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Pearl

If you're looking to get lost in a book, then this is the perfect title. The best description would be a psychological thriller with the main focus on how a telepathic pig named Pearl is able to terrorize a town.