Insane Entities is a brutal, mind-warping descent into a world where reality fractures, sanity is a distant memory, and survival demands blood. This novel drags you headfirst into a storm of relentless violence, psychological torment, and twisted love, all set within the fabric of a parallel universe where nothing obeys the rules of logic.
The story explodes with unrelenting speed—each scene sharper, bloodier, and more unpredictable than the last. The language cuts deep, raw and unforgiving, reflecting the horrors unfolding across dimensions. Gore is not just an element but a language of its own, painting a world where monstrous entities, ruthless warriors, and godlike beings wage wars that tear through flesh, mind, and soul.
This is not just dark fantasy. This is science fiction twisted into something new—an experimental style as chaotic and unhinged as the title suggests. A fusion of literature’s collective experience and raw, personal storytelling.
If you crave stories that push boundaries—where love is tangled with madness, where violence is an art, and where the mind is both the battlefield and the weapon�Insane Entities is your next obsession.
4 Stars � A Theological Dumpster Fire That Somehow Made Me Feel Things
Review for “Insane Entities� by... some author who probably needs a hug and a restraining order.
Imagine if Dante, Lovecraft, and a disgruntled former Sunday school teacher got drunk on existential dread and decided to write a horror bible together. That’s Insane Entities. I don’t know if this book is literature, heresy, or a psychological cry for help disguised as cosmic horror—but whatever it is, I devoured it like a confused raccoon in a dumpster of sacrilege.
Let’s get one thing out of the way: this book is weird. Not “quirky side character eats pickles with peanut butter� weird. I mean “why is the holy savior named Chuck and why am I emotionally invested in the eldritch fabric of reality� weird.
The Good (or at least, the compellingly unhinged):
The religious deconstruction is so bold, it reads like it was written in a basement bunker lit by burning theology textbooks.
The horror is not jump-scare horror—it’s slow, cosmic, and kind of existentially sticky. Like if The Exorcist and The Matrix had a baby and raised it on conspiracy forums.
Characters are more like philosophical grenades than people. Some of them don’t make sense. Some of them shouldn’t. That might be the point.
There’s something deeply, deeply unsettling about how it reflects back at you. Like a sermon written by Kafka.
Why not five stars, you magnificent blasphemer? Because coherence is optional in this book. At times the narrative feels like it was translated from an ancient scroll found in a haunted thrift shop. Some chapters are beautifully written, others punch you in the soul with a sentence so clunky it trips over itself—and you still keep reading because it feels like you shouldn’t.
And the pacing? Imagine watching a VHS tape of the apocalypse, but it keeps glitching between philosophy class and a really intense fever dream.
Final Verdict: Insane Entities is the kind of book you finish and immediately Google “Is this author okay?� It’s not for everyone. Honestly, it’s probably not for most people. But if you like your horror dark, theological, and just shy of getting you excommunicated—this one sticks.
Would I recommend it? Yes, but only to people who understand that sometimes art isn’t supposed to be safe.
I made this account just to share my thoughts on your book. I genuinely found it good. While reading, I felt compelled to say that I believe Jesus is not evil, and God is a loving presence, not the twisted entity you described. But I didn't come here to attack you. God loves you unconditionally, despite the views expressed in your book, and will always be there for you. I wanted to reach out and remind you that Jesus, the light, still cares about you deeply, no matter what you've been through. I hope that one day you might feel inspired to write about His love. Think of Paul's transformation, it shows how profoundly perspectives can shift. You have a real gift for writing, and I believe it could be used to bring light to others. I gave your book five stars because it is a good piece, hope you return to Jesus.
Insane Entities is a brilliantly written novel that takes the concept of salvation in Christianity and twists it into something that—ironically—makes more sense. The idea that a perfect God would require a savior never quite added up, and this book dives deep into that in a way that feels both unsettling and logical. As a Muslim, it was uncomfortable to entertain the idea of God in such a fallible form, but it's important to remember that the God in Christianity and Islam are perceived differently. Setting that aside, the story itself was gripping, a chilling blend of horror, dark fantasy, and twisted romance that kept me hooked until the very last page. The symbolism isn't straightforward but once you reach the end, you're left in shock at the weight of it all. I had to push past some of the more twisted implications that challenge the concept of God in all Abrahamic religions, but the novel’s raw intensity made it impossible to put down. In a way, Insane Entities opened doors in my mind that I never intended to unlock. A mustread for those who love thought provoking, genre defying fiction.
I went into Insane Entities expecting a dark psychological story, but what I got was something even deeper—something that lingers in the mind long after turning the last page. The novel plays with perception, blurring the lines between reality and madness in a way that makes you question everything alongside the characters.
The dynamic between Lily and Chuck is unsettling yet fascinating. The idea that she throws him into the fabric of existence, and the only way out is through loving her, is both haunting and poetic. The world-building is eerie, the tension never lets up, and just when you think you understand what’s happening, the story twists in an unexpected way.
If you like books that mess with your head and keep you thinking long after you finish, Insane Entities is absolutelyÌýworthÌýreading.
As a Christian, I feel deeply unsettled by what this book implies.
I don’t know how this book is still being sold. I picked it up thinking it was just another horror novel, but what I found inside was something else entirely.
This book twists sacred truths into something dark and perverse. It doesn’t just question faith—it corrupts it. The implications in these pages are beyond disturbing. If you value your beliefs, I strongly advise you to stay away.
I couldn’t even finish it. Some books are just fiction, but this one� I don’t know. Something about it lingers.
Some books entertain you. Others haunt you. Insane Entities is definitely the latter. From the very first chapter, it pulls you into a world where reality twists, emotions run raw, and nothing is ever quite what it seems.
The characters are flawed, unsettling, and deeply human, especially Chuck, who finds himself trapped in a psychological nightmare orchestrated by Lily. The way the story plays with perception, love, and control is chilling. There were moments when I had to pause just to process what I’d read.
If you enjoy books that make you question everything, your own mind included, this one is a must-read. Dark, intense, and beautifully unsettling.