The novel 'Vitiators' hooked me from the first page with its unsettling blend of psychological horror and dystopian intrigue.
it follows a group of people who wake up in a crumbling facility, their memories fragmented, only to discover they've been subjected to experimental procedures that distort perception itself. The protagonist, a former scientist named Elias, slowly realizes they're part of a project manipulating human morality—turning altruism into cruelty through surgical and chemical means. The tension builds as alliances
shift; some characters embrace their altered selves, while others fight to reclaim their humanity. What stuck with me was the eerie ambiguity—was the 'vitiation' process truly irreversible, or were some resisting all along? The final act descends into a
Nightmare of paranoia, leaving just enough unanswered to haunt you after the last page.
What makes 'Vitiators' stand out isn't just
the body horror (though those scenes are visceral), but how it mirrors real-world ethical debates. The author sneaks in parallels to everything from military dehumanization training to social media algorithms that reward outrage. It's one of those rare books where the speculative elements feel uncomfortably plausible. I finished it in two
sleepless nights—couldn't shake the feeling that our own world might be halfway to that facility already.