Extinction Dream
Andrew Najberg
Wicked House Publishing (August 1, 2025)
Reviewed by Andrew Byers


Andrew Najberg’s Extinction Dream is a gripping work of science fiction-horror that thrusts readers straight into an unrelenting psychic battlefield. As with Gollitok, Najberg’s previous masterpiece, Extinction Dream is a harrowing and brilliantly crafted blending of dystopian science fiction and psychological and body horror.

Mostly set aboard an orbital station, with the backdrop of a near-future, dystopian Earth collapsing under the weight of environmental catastrophe and great power conflict, the novel follows Markus, a soldier who suddenly finds himself on the front lines of an unseen war. Humanity is under assault of what seem to be powerful alien entities who telepathically attack by projecting, twisting, and amplifying their targets’ worst memories back at them. Eventually these psychic assaults begin to alter the very fabric of reality.

From the first page, the narrative is intense and immersive. Najberg is careful to balance cosmic dread with human tension—Markus and the other soldiers are not just fighters but fragile human beings, mentally fraying under the relentless psychic assault by unseen forces. The stakes are high: Earth is losing this war, and Markus’s crew is running out of time. The prose crackles with immediacy and dread. The slow unraveling of both the characters’ minds and the broader mystery is handled masterfully. Najberg neither rushes nor stalls. He maintains tension by drip-feeding answers, ensuring every brief respite is laden with unease.

That emotional undercurrent is vital. Despite the alien menace and telepathic horrors, Markus remains relatable. His fear, confusion, determination, and fraught relationships with his family back home give readers a foothold in a story that might otherwise threaten to spiral into abstract cosmic chaos.

This is not a comfortable read. It is claustrophobic, unnerving, and often surreal, but that’s precisely the point. It challenges expectations and refuses easy explanations. And yet, beneath the layers of nightmare lies a poignant meditation on resilience in the face of existential terror.

Extinction Dream is the culmination of a space-horror renaissance, a powerful marriage of genre-savvy tension and psychologically incisive storytelling. Andrew Najberg writes with cinematic flair and emotional honesty, delivering a novel that shocks, unsettles—and, ultimately, stays with you long after the last page. For readers seeking horror that transcends its tropes while staying true to them, this is one of the year’s sharpest offerings. It’s a must-read for fans of dystopian science fiction and horror. As with Gollitok, it is a compelling exploration of the human psyche in the face of insurmountable horrors. With its atmospheric world-building, a well-drawn protagonist, and relentless sense of dread, Extinction Dream is a chilling and unforgettable journey. Highly recommended.