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The Strange

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1931, New Galveston , Mars: Fourteen-year-old Anabelle Crisp sets off through the wastelands of the Strange to find Silas Mundt’s gang who have stolen her mother’s voice, destroyed her father, and left her solely with a need for vengeance.

Since Anabelle’s mother left for Earth to care for her own ailing mother, her days in New Galveston have been spent at school and her nights at her laconic father’s diner with Watson, the family Kitchen Engine and dishwasher as her only companion. When the Silence came, and communication and shipments from Earth to its colonies on Mars stopped, life seemed stuck in foreboding stasis until the night Silas Mundt and his gang attacked.

At once evoking the dreams of an America explored in Ray Bradbury’s The Martian Chronicles and the harder realities of frontier life in Charles Portis True Grit , Ballingrud’s novel is haunting in its evocation of Anabelle’s quest for revenge amidst a spent and angry world accompanied by a domestic Engine, a drunken space pilot, and the toughest woman on Mars.

Nathan Ballingrud’s stories have been adapted into the film Wounds and the Hulu series Monsterland , The Strange is his first novel.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published March 21, 2023

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About the author

Nathan Ballingrud

69 books1,291 followers
I'm the author of North American Lake Monsters: stories, coming from Small Beer Press in July 2013. I'm currently at work on my first novel and several more short stories. I live with my daughter in Asheville, NC.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 600 reviews
Profile Image for Rebecca Roanhorse.
Author 58 books10.1k followers
Read
September 13, 2022
The Strange is an intriguing vision of life on Mars for a small set of settlers mostly intent on mining the planet for a substance they call The Strange. The story follows a thirteen-year-old girl, Annabelle, whose mother returned to Earth right before the settlers lost communication with their home planet and now Annabelle, her father, and the rest of the population of Mars lingers in The Silence, wracked by fear of the unknown and an uncertain future, while Mars and whatever the Strange is grows more and more...conscious. I enjoyed the story a lot. It was an easy page-turner that felt more like reading a tale of the old West (settlers are settlers, no?) with its gritty mining town, small-time ineffective lawmen, and undercurrent of desperation. Annabelle is not your typical protagonist. She has a teenager's steadfast belief in rights and wrongs, and when she decides to seek justice for the wrongs done to her and her father by a gang of miners, nothing will stop her. Not reason or common sense or war engines who roam the desert sands intent on killing anything that passes their way. She sets out to seek her vengeance and save her father with the unlikeliest of companions and ends up finding something else, wholly alien and creepy.

The story is at its best when building characters. The adults who fail to live up to Annabelle's unrealistic expectations feel real, men and women beaten down by hopelessness and desperation. And I was intrigued by the hints of a world before the settlers came - there are mentions of a war on Mars (but little detail given), what caused the Silence, and now, what will happen with the Strange, but don't expect the story to give you the answers. The reader really only knows as much as Annabelle, which is not a lot, and therein lies both the story's strength and weakness. There were times when Annabelle's voice and vocabulary didn't quite feel right and took me out of the story, and there were some throwaway references to the Lakota settling somewhere over there on the other side of the mountain (??) and the prevalence of racism against the one Black family still being a thing on Mars. But nothing was done with either of these observations, so why make them? And there are no BIPOC characters (or queer characters) save Annabelle's Black friend who appears once and is never heard from, again, which is fine but seems a bit like a wasted opportunity. But perhaps that is because we are in the past, not the future. And therein lies my biggest stumbling block with the story. It takes place in 1931. Humans got to Mars a little sooner in this tale, and the trappings of the society they build there reflect that. It was a stumbling block for me. Part of that may be my own biases and what I am used to reading in Science Fiction, but every time I came across a date or some aspect of the 1930s (Annabelle and her father own a diner that serves up Southern home cooking), I stumbled.

That's not to say the book isn't good. It's an intriguing vision of alien life and one that I enjoyed. I blasted through it in a couple of days, a definite page-turner. The writing is lovely and poetic and a perfect mix of well-written action and character, and there's a great undercurrent of horror that I appreciated. Overall, there's a lot to like in this story and it is worth checking out.
Profile Image for Gareth Is Haunted.
407 reviews98 followers
May 1, 2023
What a fun and captivating, out-of-this-world read this turned out to be.

'My name is Annabelle Crisp. This is the story of what happened to me, what I did about it, and the consequences thereof.'

This book is called The Strange and as the title suggests, this is a very strange yet hypnotising novel.
Events play out in a Martian world, colonised by human settlers within an altered timeline so similar to, yet unlike our own. As the story progresses the characters encounter many strange and fascinating events and entities, including the titular Strange. You will have to read this to find out about that yourself.
To me, this book was a real breath of fresh air. It has all the elements you would want from a science fiction novel, along with plenty of elements that you wouldn't necessarily expect.

'As if summoned by an invocation, ghosts appeared around us in the darkness, too: phantoms curling in the wind with the sand from the dunes, rising up in breezy spirals, coalescing into the suggestion of a form, and the dissolving into the wind like blown seeds.'

The story is narrated by and follows the scintillating adventures of Annabelle, a rather headstrong, petulant, and larger-than-life young girl. She has all the traits you would assume a young girl would have, yet she is so much more than that. My thoughts on her varied throughout my reading experience. One moment, I would feel caringly towards her or feel some kind of pity for the situations she finds herself in. Yet within a few more pages of reading, I would maybe feel something closing in on hatred for her but when thinking back to my youth, things were far more black and white than they appear later on in life, so ultimately this can be forgiven with foresight. I loved this story having such a conflicted and multifaceted main character.

This felt like an amazing blend of science fiction, horror and a dystopian frontier western, with plenty of otherworldly supernatural elements thrown in for good measure. I loved this mix of influences. It felt fresh and full-bodied compared to the majority of science fiction I have read recently and kept me on my toes trying to anticipate what would happen next.
The writing was brilliantly descriptive and kept to a very pleasant pace from start to finish. The overall reading experience was very rewarding and enjoyable with a good balance between action, dialogue, really well-drawn characters and a great knack for telling an extremely enjoyable and multilayered story. I know a book is good when I can picture the events within my mind's eye, with this I almost felt like I was on that lonely and hostile red planet myself.

'I was drawn to it, though it stirred a primordial fear in me. It was the original terror, the knowledge of a predatory hunger lurking beyond the firelight's edge.'
Strange by name, even stranger by nature. Highly recommended!!

Thanks to Netgalley and Titan Books for providing me with an ARC copy for review.
Profile Image for Mallory.
1,880 reviews274 followers
March 11, 2023
The title is certainly appropriate because this is a strange book, but in such a good way. This is a bit of an old school science fiction story set on Mars after what they call the Silence, when they stopped hearing anything from Earth without any explanation. The narrator for this story is a very hard girl named Annabelle who is set on vengeance after a series of events take everything dear to her away. Annabelle was hard to like at times, but she was a great narrator for the harsh and strange lands of Mars. Annabelle has lived her whole life in the main colony on Mars and finds out how little she knows about her home. I liked the writing a lot and this was a very exciting story that was a quick read.
Profile Image for Char.
1,923 reviews1,849 followers
March 22, 2023
When I saw that THE STRANGE was available from NetGalley, I requested it right away. Ever since I read NORTH AMERICAN LAKE MONSTERS, I've been meaning to return to Nathan Ballingrud's work, and now I'm finally here!

On Mars, young Annabelle Crisp seeks to avenge her father. Together, they run a small diner- ever since Annabelle's mom returned to Earth. Then came The Silence. People would travel back and forth to Earth all the time, but now no one has heard from Earth in a long, long time. No one knows what happened or if the Earth even still exists. As a result, Mars is short on supplies; people are hungry and afraid. After her father's diner was robbed, a murder was committed and Annabelle's dad was arrested. She sets out with another loner to retrieve what was stolen and to hold accountable those responsible. Will she be successful? Will she be able to free her father? What happened to Earth? You will have to read this to find out!

Of course the first thing that popped into my mind was True Grit. I finally read the book last year and that young lady was on my mind the entire time I was reading THE STRANGE. Even though this book takes place on a different planet, this feels more like a western than science fiction. I had a lot of questions about the science and how these people were breathing on Mars, but this story doesn't get very heavy with the science at all. I think I might have preferred to know a bit more about how those settlers got there, but I also think that would have been a much longer book.

What I did like was Annabelle and her growth throughout the story. Even though she lives on Mars and is currently motherless, she's actually kind of spoiled. As she insisted on pursuing the robbers, she becomes more and more aware of what she was risking and what she was causing other people to risk on her behalf. In that respect, this is more of a coming of age story than anything else.

I loved the world building and would have enjoyed more of it, however, (again), I'm sure that would have been a much longer book. There's also an alternative history here, because this all takes place in 1931. Yep, that's right-1931. On Mars.

All of this was enough to keep me reading, though I did think that the denouement felt rushed. Everything wound up quickly and many questions remain unanswered. If there is going to be another book, I'm here for it, but as a stand alone this left me feeling a bit...unsatisfied.

Overall though, I enjoyed the ideas, the world building and most of all, the characters. After mulling it over, I ended up with a rating of 3.5/5 but I've rounded it up for Goodreads because they still haven't given us the option of half stars.

Recommended!

*Thanks to Gallery/Saga Press and NetGalley for the e-ARC in exchange for my honest feedback. This is it!*

Profile Image for Michael Hicks.
Author 38 books497 followers
February 11, 2023
One of the greatest joys in reading is being transported to another reality, another realm, another dimension, a different time, and sharing in the imaginings and musings of a skilled author as they relate their tale. Nathan Ballingrud is a master at this, and the swift elasticity he has with telling stories set within, and often intermingling between, various genres shouldn't surprise anyone who has read his short story collections. If you've read Wounds: Six Stories from the Border of Hell, then I'm sure you understand. So to have him tackle a science fiction-alternate history-western mash-up on a ghost riddled Mars with such a deft and assured hand is hardly surprising, but it is still worth marveling over.

The set-up is surprisingly simple given all the peculiarities surrounding it. After their diner is robbed and the Sheriff of New Gavleston is too lazy to do anything about it, Annabelle Crisp sets out across the sands to retrieve the most priceless of that which was stolen: the last recording of her mother's voice. Oh, and those peculiarities I mentioned? Well, The Strange is set on Mars, you see. In 1931.

Far from the hard science fiction of an author like, say, Alastair Reynolds, Ballingrud opts for the more fantastical spirits of Jules Verne and H.G. Wells, giving us a broad overview of this alternate history. Seeking to escape enlistment into the Civil War, Chauncy Peabody launched himself into space and settled on the red planet. More people followed, like the Crisp family. With them came a new age of prosperity and wonder...until all contact with Earth was lost in what came to be known as The Silence.

Some readers may find themselves lost amidst the lack of details or historical accuracy to shore up Ballingrud's setting, but I had little difficulty escaping into the author's flight of fancy. I was hooked right from the outset and regretted having to put the book down each time I was forced to contend with reality (given the state of reality, can you blame me?). I easily set aside whatever disbelief I had and allowed myself to set foot on Martian soil, eagerly joining Annabelle's campaign alongside the rough-and-tumble outlaw, a drunk, and her robot companion as they left New Gavelston for the wilder and much more dangerous Dig Town, and the Martian desert beyond.

Does it matter at all that Civil War-era America lacked the technology and capabilities to reach Mars, let alone establish any kind of outpost? Not one single whit, as far as I was concerned. I didn't care. Neither does Ballingrud, and thank goodness for that. The dude's following his muse, and I respect the hell out of his ability to carve out a tale and not let silly things like facts or historical accuracy get in the way of something this good. It's a fantasy that's as beautiful as it is occasionally grotesque and macabre. It's also a testament to the fact that an author worth his salt, with a voice so captivating, can spiel together a string of otherwise preposterous hooks and have you so willingly take the bait, catch yourself on his line, and allow yourself to be reeled in so fully.

A human settlement on Mars circa the 1930s is utterly ridiculous, but for a few solid handful of hours I did believe and was fully invested in this whole damn what-if. And it's Annabelle herself that sells it wholesale. She's a mean-tempered, hostile, justice-seeking teenager, angry and ambitious, and fueled by hot-headed justifications. She's so well-grounded and relatable it's hard not to root for her. She's been scorned, let down, and struck with the understanding of how corrupt those around her really are. All of her child-like innocence is snuffed out in one violent night and a red-hot need is all that's left to drive her forward. Annabelle grounds the whole damn thing, and you get sucked right into her orbit alongside her small band of outlaws because she looms large off the page.

The Strange is a marvelous concoction of disparate ideas, but they all join together seamlessly to create a single unified world that reads like True Grit by way of Edgar Rice Burroughs (but, thankfully, without his racism). That Balllingrud is able to execute this story with some clear-headed precision and skill is a testament. He's not just a damn good author, he's a fucking con artist, and I mean that in the best way possible! We should all be grateful this man chose to be a writer instead of a snake-oil salesman, because after this book I fear the kind of grifts he'd be capable of pulling off.
Profile Image for Sadie Hartmann.
Author 24 books7,268 followers
April 30, 2023
I buddy read this with a friend which was great because there are so many things to talk about while reading this book. Full review in-coming just wanted to say that this is a contender for 2023 Top Ten.
Profile Image for Bethany (Beautifully Bookish Bethany).
2,695 reviews4,620 followers
April 23, 2023
Mixed feelings about this one. The Strange is a sci-fi Western set in an alternate 1930's on Mars, with horror elements. At times it's a very engaging, propulsive read with interesting ideas and a creeping sense of horror.

It took me awhile to get into it, I think because the prose intentionally gives the vibe of an old western novel and begins with a lot of telling as set-up. But once I got into it, I was very intrigued, up until the ending. That's where it kind of lost me. In part because I don't really see what the choice of setting this in alternate history adds to the story. It just ends up being a weird choice when we're talking about people on different sides of the civil war, racism toward this one Black family, and references to Cherokee and Lakota people on Mars using outdated terminology.

I'm not sure I would go so far as to call this "problematic" but it's certainly not well-thought through and if the author was trying to say something about colonization and race (which I think he might be?) it really falls flat. The ending also just read as kind of absurd and rushed which was a letdown after the creepy buildup that came before. So mixed feelings. When this is good, it's very good and the writing works. But the ending kind of falls apart for me. I received a copy of this book for review from the publisher, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Rachel (TheShadesofOrange).
2,850 reviews4,646 followers
April 7, 2023
4.0 Stars
This was a solid space western that took on a fun horror twist. As someone who loves Firefly and The Mandelorian, I love the aesthetics of this niche subgenre. The prose was spot on, creating a genuine historical western feel even though the story was set on a future Mars. However I will also acknowledge that this had a dryer quality than made the story feel long and slow burning, despite the action. I recommend the audio version because it really brought the young girl to life.
Profile Image for Thomas Wagner | SFF180.
164 reviews982 followers
January 19, 2024
A book like The Strange is one of those wonderful surprises that makes reading SFF such an unbeatable pastime. A book like this is a bolt from the blue — or maybe the red. Nathan Ballingrud delivers one of the most sublimely executed adventures I’ve read in quite a while. And he’s done it not by trying to produce bleeding-edge hard SF or space opera, but by hewing closely to the old-fashioned conceits of planetary romance, a genre that rose to popularity over a hundred years ago and that’s held its own ever since.

This is a space western set on Ray Bradbury’s Mars, essentially Charles Fortis’s classic True Grit played out among the haunted dunes of a red planet colonized by humans since the mid-19th century. But Ballingrud is not simply mining nostalgia. Once his alternate history is established (The Strange takes place, not in the future, but in 1931), the book has the voice and character of a story that could only have been written in the 2020s. Old and new sensibilities are brought together to brilliant effect.

Anabelle Crisp is a 14-year-old girl living in the Martian colony of New Galveston, which lies a short distance from Dig Town, a mazelike mining settlement digging up a mineral called the Strange. (Continued...)
Profile Image for Blair.
2,006 reviews5,800 followers
August 18, 2024
In the alternate history of The Strange, humans travelled to Mars in the 19th century, and 60 years later have established a few (sparse) settlements there. Mars trade is largely organised around a substance called the Strange, which is used to give ‘life’ to android-like workers and companions known as Engines. Or at least it was, until the recent advent of ‘the Silence’, a mysterious cessation of all contact with Earth, which has cut off the Mars towns from everyone else – and 14-year-old Anabelle from her mother. When Anabelle’s family diner is robbed, she channels her rage into a quest to get back what was stolen, taking her away from the town she’s grown up in and across a vast, treacherous crater. Basically, it’s science fiction-slash-horror-slash-western. This is a vivid, near-cinematic, story that held my interest by constantly shifting its horizons. I never knew quite what we were going to encounter next.

Really, the only issue I have with The Strange is its surprisingly narrow narrative focus. Reading the first page, in which Anabelle is speaking from the vantage point of old age, I assumed the story would be about her whole life on Mars, not just this one episode when she was a teenager. It is, in fact, just this one episode when she was a teenager. It’s still a captivating story, but it does all feel a bit YA as a result. Anabelle as a character reminded me of Lalage in Antonia Honeywell’s The Ship: she’s a believably written teenager, but that means she is often quite annoying and makes frustrating decisions. It’s also, frankly, a bit unbelievable that a bunch of hardened criminals would do everything a naive girl says just because she’s threatening to dob them in to the sheriff. That’s the weakest aspect of the plot and, again, makes it feel more juvenile than I’d like.

But the imagination on display in The Strange is wonderful. I could picture it all perfectly – Ballingrud is a master of providing just enough detail. The journey across the crater is like Dune meets Mad Max, with its own unique flourishes: the image of Peabody, in particular, is a stroke of genius and will definitely stay with me.
Profile Image for Ruxandra Grrr [in a slump :(((((].
863 reviews135 followers
April 11, 2023
THEN: After reading 'Wounds', I could not possibly be more excited for this!
//
NOW: This is a book I was highly anticipating, that's written quite beautifully (the descriptions are quite haunting and savage and lovely), from the author who wrote Wounds: Six Stories from the Border of Hell, which I've been thinking about - I so vividly remember parts of those stories, haunting *is* the word -, with a bunch of intriguing scifi/ fantasy/ horror concepts that I love in theory, and yet, I am feeling lukewarm about it. What the heck happened? I'm sad.

I think it's the characters and the world. There's an obvious western inspiration here, and an even more obvious True Grit inspiration - Anabelle is very similar to the protagonist from that (and then the connection to True Grit was acknowledged in the acknowledgments) -, and I am so conflicted, because I did not like any of the characters and yet I am the person who's like: stop calling female characters 'unlikable'! But I have been thinking about it while reading this slowly and I think I would have been fine with Anabelle staying the same as long as some of the other characters were different! But everyone is either gritty in the extreme, but yeah, with a tough shell to crack and a soft interior, or dead inside (in more ways than one). And it felt exhausting. I kept trying to find ways to connect to this world, but I felt pushed back at every turn, by everybody. I get why this world would create these people, I do, but I think they were just not for me, and it felt depressing to spend time with them, it felt cold, distant, removed. The sparse acts of kindness and affection were not enough.

And then the world! Part of it is fucking amazing and part of it makes no sense. I think maybe that some of this is about colonialism? Maybe? But I cannot for the life of me understand why it was important for the narrative that it all take place in 1931 in an alternate universe where the US (and Germany!) have gone to Mars much earlier? Was it just a flavor thing? A texture aesthetic thing? Why do we have to bring the confederacy into Mars and the American civil war? Cause it leads to *strange* decisions, like having a Black family in the community (called by a very outdated, Jim Crow-era word), or mentions of settlements of Cherokee and Lakota people (called by a very old and disrespectful term that was widespread in the 30s).

All in all, this was a story about not giving into desperation and about not losing hope, but we did have to get through a lot of desperation and hopelessness to get to a place where there's a little bit of hope? Maybe? But not enough for me.

I will still continue to read Ballingrud's stuff in the future, because:

Most disturbing were the high wails of human beings, carried on the wind like wisps of blood-dipped lace, a half-articulated cry for help or a lover's name or simply a howl of anguish.
Profile Image for Anna.
1,056 reviews813 followers
July 20, 2023
I wanted so badly to love this Sci-Fi/Western mashup! I didn’t hate it, but I wouldn’t recommend it if you’re in for the sciency bits… there aren’t any many. Some aspects of the writing I thought were good, but the worldbuilding and low-stakes plot are the novel’s weakest points. You can’t really tell it’s Mars because, even in this alternate history, the author ignores the challenges and implications of humanity colonizing and living on the planet. There’s so much disbelief I am willing to suspend. I mean... horse riding? Mining the Spice Strange?

The protagonist is the most unconvincing of all: why would these grownups go along with this naïve 14yo girl’s bullying is beyond me. I guess, unlike the Deputy, Ballingrud does hide behind a child.
Profile Image for Oliver Clarke.
Author 96 books1,928 followers
December 15, 2024
'The Strange' is a wonderful, page turning sci fi adventure, that blends western tropes, horror and a coming of age narrative into a very satisfying whole. It's set in Mars in the 1930s, humans are mining the planet. Teenage heroine and narrator Annabelle helps her father run the town diner and gets pulled into a quest across the planet when robbers attack their business.
Annabelle is pure Mattie Ross (the heroine of Charles Portis' excellent western 'True Grit'), but no worse for that. She's smart, determined, funny and a joy to read. The events of the book and the background to the occupation of Mars are ridiculous in just the right way. It's pure pulpy entertainment, with monsters, robots and peril.
A very enjoyable read from an author I'll definitely be revisiting.
Profile Image for Bradley.
Author 9 books4,815 followers
June 2, 2024
This is definitely one that will sit on my mind for a while. There's a lot of great worldbuilding aspects to this Mars-based (but apparently not futuristic!) western. I've been fascinated by this from the very start. Get this: even fifty years prior, in the 1880's the first lander on mars started this whole colonization kick, the wild west on what would otherwise be a Barsoomian planet, able to hold atmosphere and crops, and we have outposts, towns, and cities.

And then all communication and travel with Earth went silent a few years past -- and now we've got the psychological horror of being cut off, alone, and the things that people do in that situation.

And this is just the beginning. I'll tell you -- I got PISSED. And frankly, I fell into this tale, raged with it, and was all down for the OTHER mystery, the one that the book is named for. The mystery of Mars, itself. Add the robots, AI creativeness, the idea of consciousness, and a WHOLE LOT of INJUSTICE -- and we get a really cool western that's also all SF while being very creative.

I don't want to give away the goodies, but suffice to say, there ARE some delicious goodies here and great characters.
Profile Image for Gabrielle (Reading Rampage).
1,170 reviews1,711 followers
July 26, 2023
I am a huge fan of Nathan Ballingrud��s horror stories, and while I was a bit surprised to see him go in the sci-fi direction, I was mostly just very excited to see what kind of weirdness he would bring to such a story. The blurbs I kept seeing for it referred to Ray Bradbury and Jeff VanderMeer, which is a strong selling point for me, and after finishing the book, I have to say, the comparisons are pretty spot-on: it’s a soft sci-fi in the style of Bradbury, with all the weirdness and mushrooms one might expect from a VanderMeer story.

“The Strange” is really a space Western, with emphasis on “Western”: Annabelle was born on Earth, but has spent most of her life in New Galveston, a Martian colony near the mine where a substance known as the Strange is extracted and processed. One day, her mother receives a message about the on-coming death of her own mother, and catches a ship back to Earth. Soon after that, a phenomenon known as the Silence happens, and all communication between the Earth and Mars is severed. Annabelle and her father carry on running the family establishment, a small diner, with the help of a robot named Watson. One night, as they are closing shop, they are robbed at gunpoint, one of the items stolen being the last recording of Annabelle’s mother’s voice. Desperate to get it back, she decides to hunt down the thieves, setting a series of events into motion that will change the way she understands her home and the planet’s inhabitants.

There is no real horror here as there is in Ballingrud’s other work, but there is plenty of darkness, despair and weirdness. He is very skilled at creating unsettling atmospheres, and he really nailed the dingy little town, it’s bizarre citizens and the ominous landscape the story is set in. there are a few unanswered questions by the time the story wraps up, which felt a little frustrating, but Ballingrud is not the type to spoon-feed readers. He created an alternative-history of space exploration, and I would have loved more world-development, but this story is meant to be insular and convey a sense of claustrophobia, so broadening the world might not have made sense.

4 very solid stars. I prefer his horror stories, but this was still a really will and unusual ride, and I can’t wait to read whatever he comes up with next!
Profile Image for Jeff.
280 reviews31 followers
August 28, 2022
This imaginative adventure is an original blend of sci-fi, fantasy and horror that creates a compelling and satisfying story. Ballingrud's first novel lives up to its title and delivers a visionary experience worthy of Edgar Rice Burroughs and Frank Herbert, driven by authentic characters with enough heart for fans of Stephen King and Robert McCammon. The unusual journey takes readers through an alternative-history like no other, in which space travel became possible in the 19th century. Take a break from the ordinary and treat yourself to a dose of The Strange.
Profile Image for Lukasz.
1,781 reviews450 followers
January 16, 2024
Nathan Ballingrud writes brilliant short stories. I recommend his collection, "Wounds," to any reader interested in quality horror fiction. I was beyond excited to check out his debut novel, "The Strange." The reviews are mostly positive and praise the book. Unfortunately, I fail to understand the hype. Don't get me wrong; it's a solid book that combines space western, horror, and some dope imagery. On the flip side, I found the characterization thin, the plot unconvincing, and the pacing uneven. Near the end, I just didn't care at all about anything that was happening. Ballingrud is a talented writer, and his prose is strong, but "The Strange" didn't awe me.

Format: audiobook listened at 2x speed.
Author 5 books43 followers
May 3, 2023
The Bland.

The only thing strange about The Strange is how many people whose opinions I respect overhyped it. Wake me up when Ballingrud puts out another Weird Lit collection instead of this soulless Hollywood-style crap.
Profile Image for Whitney Jamimah.
815 reviews70 followers
July 22, 2025
There were things I really liked about this and things I really did not.

The good is that it was really reminiscent of my one true love, The Dark Tower. It's set on Mars but Mars has a western vibe to it that was just singing to my Dark Tower loving heart.

The bad was that the main character annoyed me so much it made the reading experience tough. I am the type of reader who just cannot get behind a despicable main character. I don't care than Annabelle is just a kid, didn't her parents raise her with a single iota of manners?! She was supposed to be rough and tumble I believe but to me she just came across as rude and I hated it.
Profile Image for Sjgomzi.
339 reviews157 followers
April 26, 2023
This has been described by many as The Martian Chronicles meets True Grit, and I’m certainly not going to come up with a better description or review than that. I loved this so much. One of the best books I’ve read all year.
Profile Image for Haniya Halana.
18 reviews2 followers
January 31, 2025
Achieving originality in this day and age is almost an impossibility task and writers are the product of their inspiration. That said, a barrage of homages can get in the way of telling a simple, familiar story that could've been great without them.

The Strange sets in 1931, New Galveston in Mars and follows a fourteen-year-old Anabelle Crisp and her father who owns a small diner. A violent man shows up and cause trouble, driving Anabelle's father to violence. Anabelle now must venture across the wasteland to bring back the only thing can save her father.

Starting from just the setting, Nathan Ballingrud pays homage to the late great Ray Bradbury and his novel, The Martian Chronicles. The similarity are too on the nose to not be a homage. Nathan Ballingrud, like Ray Bradbury does not concerned himself too much with detailed scientific world building but uses it merely to tell a speculation of the human condition. As the story progress, we learned of the ore called the strange which is where the novel gets its title from and is another homage, this time to Frank Herbet's Dune. The Strange is also a western frontier with mining community and that brought another homage within the setting, which is True Grit by Charles Portis and True Grit's homages wasn't specifically just the setting either. Besides the barrage of homages though, is how a lot of it were told instead of being shown. The novel is told through first person POV, we're told a lot of things regarding the setting which was a disappointment, because I was hoping for an atmospheric development.

As for another thing that True Grit influenced are the character or at least the main character. I know that the young teen protagonist is not a specifically a True Grit thing but Anabelle Crisp is also a word for word copy of Mattie from True Grit. Anabelle is a big reader with Sir Arthur Conan Doyle's Sherlock Holmes being her obsession and she named her companion robot that comes with an English accent as Watson. Watson is another True Grit homage as Mattie has her own travelling companion but Watson is also a homage to Issac Asimov's I, Robot. Besides Anabelle though, their aren't as interesting nor flesh out. The most disappointing one has to be Anabelle and her father, which was a relationship I would have wanted a deeper dive in but it lacks any depth.

The plot kick off when one of the miner came in and stole a cannister that holds recordings of Anabelle's mother. Her father became violent and was thrown to jail by the town's sheriff. Anabelle goes on a quest to retrieve the cannister to somehow help keep his father's sanity and that was essentially the whole story. In its simplicity, Nathan Ballingrud muddles the story with the homages and the unclarity of whether this was a revenge story or this was just an adventure story.

Generally speaking, this was a well written novel from its prose and the structure of the story. There's a voice to the story that made sense with the way the story was framed but it was towards the middle, lost and then it sounded very generic till the end. Another thing that bugged me was while the story was told by an older Anabelle, she never sounds like a fourteen-year-old girl. Old Anabelle telling the story never felt like she was lamenting on her quest so her not sounding like a teenager just felt weird.

The Strange felt like it was written for me with all the homages but it all just got in a way on a potentially poignant story of an older woman lamenting on an old quest she undertook.
Profile Image for Kate Victoria RescueandReading.
1,768 reviews117 followers
January 31, 2025
As the title indicates, this story is mighty strange.

It’s an alt history scifi western with some thrills and horror thrown into the mix(yuppp the author decided to go with all the genres)! Oh and it takes place on Mars because duh!!! They even ferry between planets in flying saucers.

Now we have the insufferable teenage main character Annabelle- who frankly is annoying AF and hard to like. Her attitude and perceptions cause 99% of her problems, yet she continues to act out and do reckless things.

The whole book felt pointless- retrieve the canister then lose the canister. Destroy one ship to build another crappier ship that can carry less people. Why????
Profile Image for Dr. Cat  in the Brain.
177 reviews75 followers
April 30, 2024
Ballingrud's collection Wounds still has the highest rating of any book I've reviewed here.

This work by the same author is a lot of fun. It's kind of like an alternate history version of the western True Grit. Only it's on Mars and the entire planet is haunted. There's a ton of potential (especially in regards to the 'Strange' being brought back to Earth and the consequences of that), but a lot of the character work just didn't hit for me.

Still effective, and Ballingrud's imagery is consistently fantastic, but it didn't come together completely. I'd recommend it, but keep your expectations realistic.

6/10
138 reviews2 followers
December 31, 2022
Not me googling "what exactly is steampunk" to figure out why this story takes place in 1931.

This is a classic, gritty, steampunk (!) sci-fi novel with elements of western and horror. Nathan Ballingrud did an amazing job creating the voice of his character Belle, a thirteen-year-old girl living on the United States' Mars colony. Belle has been THROUGH IT, and she spends the novel going THROUGH IT some more.

I liked that her character was traumatized, yet headstrong and determined. The other colonists consider her prickly and friendless, but as a narrator I found her super likeable and relatable (maybe I am also prickly and friendless?).

There is a creepiness factor to the story as well, some supernatural horror elements. It was a good mix of genres, an engaging story with great writing and sympathetic characters.

Thank you to Ballingrud and NetGalley for the ARC. I loved it.
Profile Image for T.R. Napper.
Author 35 books228 followers
February 18, 2023
A page-turning science-fantasy that sparks with originality, despite treading well-worn ground. Part western, part horror, part old-school SF, The Strange finds something new and compelling in the haunted deserts of Mars.

The protagonist, Anabelle Crisp, is a young woman out for revenge. Vividly drawn, she seethes with outrage and is armed with the sharpest of sharp tongues. I thoroughly enjoyed her journey.

The Strange is not perfect. The ending didn’t quite land for me, the non-scientific setting took a little to get used to, and some of the world-building aspects occasionally felt askew. But I inhaled the book in two days, which can only be a good thing.
Profile Image for Fiona Knight.
1,420 reviews287 followers
December 7, 2023
They stole something from me," I said, calmly and quietly. "They stole something I need and something my father needs. I've sat by while everyone around me just shrugged their shoulders and let it happen and made up reasons why we had to allow it. And then, while we was down, they turned on us, and they took even more. You better believe it's serious. There's gonna be a reckoning, and I'm gonna deliver it."

Will I ever get tired of the space western? Not if I keep getting books like The Strange! It wasn't perfect, but it was a great mix of genres, one I enjoyed a whole lot.

The Silence came to Mars - that's the colonist's name for the sudden loss of communication with Earth. And with that huge loss came a more personal one for Anabelle Crisp - her mother was on the last flight out, and has gone just as silent as the rest of Earth. So when the diner her father still runs is robbed, and a cylinder with the last recording of her mother's voice is taken, she finds there's a line she won't allow to be crossed and embarks on a mission to bring her mother home.

This Mars is a harsh one, Engines (automatons) and humans coexisting, a nearby mining colony where the residents develop glowing eyes from exposure to The Strange, and adults surrounding Anabelle who have decided continued survival of the colony trumps individual upsets. I enjoyed the way the peril wasn't downplayed, and the grit shown by our protagonist - she's a pretty collected kid, but still feels like one; Nathan Ballingrud walked a fine line with her and did it well.

I do wish some mysteries were less developed or more resolved, though. Ambiguity is one thing, but when you have something that gets a lot of focus in a relatively short book, I'd have loved to see just a little more in the way of explanation. I'm pretty bad with ambiguity though, so I didn't want to oversell the impact when I enjoyed the book anyway - it's very likely more of a me thing.

Overall the book itself was a solid win, from an author whose short work I've really enjoyed - I'm excited to see how he goes with more long form work in the future.
Profile Image for Aimee.
180 reviews38 followers
October 7, 2024
How strange
You’re five-star experience is another’s “ I don’t give a fuck” read.. I was bored and felt like the “science” in the sci-fi was lacking. Still, it felt more like when someone was trying to tell you the plot of the book they were writing, the over-explanation instead of just curling up into the story bothered me. The plot is cool, but just I wish I was organically picking up the pieces along the way ya know? And why did they make the main character a teen? Felt YA.
Haters gonna hate. Sorry,
Profile Image for Christina Pilkington.
1,786 reviews233 followers
May 10, 2023
*2.5 stars

This is a difficult book for me to review because I thought the writing itself was evocative and beautifully told at times. And despite not liking the main character-I found her extremely immature, impulsive, too head-strong, and often insufferable-she did feel like a well-realized person.

But the plot and world-building felt off to me. For the first half of the book, I would often forget that the book was set on Mars. The book is pitched as a Western in space, but I only felt slight hints of any western influences. There were also things the characters would mention about past historical events that should have major significance in the present, that were just thrown out there and then dropped.The end was rather abrupt, and I wish there had been a better explanation.

Even though this is a short book, it took me almost a week to read it. I found it hard to get invested in either the plot or the characters. I still would like to read whatever the author writes next, as I think his ideas are creative.
Profile Image for Kern.
126 reviews2 followers
June 13, 2023
Ballingrud's first novel, following a couple popular short story collections, takes a story you might find in a Western film and sets it on a dystopian Mars colony. Already one to play with horror conventions, Ballingrud proves adept at blending a True Grit-esque story with supernatural sci-fi elements. Where the novel falls flat is in its rather basic prose and thin character development. One of Ballingrud's primary strengths as a storyteller is in his ability to conjure images within the mind of the reader, but The Strange trades complexity for accessibility, making the prose easier to read but less interesting as a result. His short stories never gave him the chance to build three-dimensional characters, and The Strange sadly doesn't see him spreading his wings in that regard, instead relying on stock character types. This may sound more critical than intended; it's an enjoyable, quick read, but its flaws hold it back from being the standout I expected from this strong, burgeoning author.
Profile Image for Sherry.
980 reviews104 followers
August 15, 2023
I love a good sci-fi and I love a good western and when those two genres are put together, I’m a happy camper. Throw in some horror and the fun is amplified to a satisfying degree. When I learned that this was in part, inspired by True Grit by Charles Portis and remembering how much I enjoyed that book, I knew that I had to read this immediately. I was not disappointed. Annabelle and Mattie have a good deal in common and I loved them both. Perhaps some might find Annabelle’s prickly and exacting nature a trial but I loved her. Her narrative voice was a pleasure and very close in style to Mattie’s voice from True Grit. I’m not sure why this didn’t get the full five stars. Certainly Annabelle’s character and the setting warranted it but perhaps there was just a bit too much going on. But do not be deterred by that slight criticism. It was a lot of fun and most interesting to see how the author managed to pull off a solid sci-fi setting with the plot of True Grit at its heart. I listened to this on Audible which definitely added to my reading experience. Definitely would recommend.
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