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“Q: What happens when the fog of war gets inside one's head? A: The military novel gone gothic....Milas nimbly and delicately balances the book between genres: It would be a relief for Loyette, and for the reader, if we could classify it—label it, defang it—as horror rather than having, agonizingly, to view it as a realistic portrait of a war-damaged mind collapsing in on itself.
— Kirkus
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This is a beautiful horror story told masterfully and elegantly. It is a brilliant, different kind of war novel, one that reveals the insidious ways the violences of war can tear people apart from the inside out.
— Roxane Gay, New York Times bestselling author of Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body
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A page-turner that is also a searing, gut-wrenching, literally haunting portrait of war and military allure, with its endless mirages and trap doors. I'll never stop thinking about The Militia House.
— Gabriela Garcia, New York Times bestselling author of Of Women and Salt
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It's not enough to say that The Militia House is one of the great haunted house stories of this century. In his startling and aching portrait of American soldiers in Afghanistan, John Milas takes us deep into the psychological damage of war that these young people carry with them. This is an indelible first novel--terrifying and heart-rending, full of scenes and images that will linger for long afterward.
— Dan Chaon, author of Sleepwalk
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I was floored from the very first page of The Militia House. Milas takes the absurdity of war and plants a haunted house tale in its heart. The result is terrifying and uncanny, with an ending so devastating that it felt like those final pages took a piece of me with them.
— Gus Moreno, author of This Thing Between Us
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The Militia House is a stunningly original examination of the enduring darkness not just in humanity’s capacity for war but in our very souls. In these times particularly, this is a book that speaks importantly to us all.
— Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of A Good Scent from a Strange Mountain
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The Militia House seamlessly joins war and horror, reminding me of something Ambrose Bierce might have written, had he been born a Millennial, just as bleak, twice as earnest, and done a deployment with the U.S. Marines in Southwest Asia. This is not the bloodiest Afghanistan war novel I have read, but the most unsettling.
— Brian Van Reet, author of Spoils