Some things don’t chase you. They wait for you to notice them.
When Peter Hale was eight years old, his family moved to a town his mother called Doomsville – a place whispered about for disappearances, strange nights, and neighbours who never looked up.
His father said it was all rumours.
He was wrong.
As Peter begins noticing things no child should see – people acting strangely, moments repeating, houses that feel occupied from the inside – he learns of something the town fears but never names openly:
The Man on the Moon.
It watches.
It learns.
And once it understands you, it never truly lets you go.
As reality around him starts to fracture, Peter must fight to hold onto his own mind while those closest to him are twisted into something unfamiliar. Because in Doomsville, people don’t just vanish.
They are rewritten.
A chilling psychological horror of paranoia, identity, and cosmic dread, The Man on the Moon is perfect for readers who love unsettling small-town horror, creeping suspense, and stories that stay with you long after the final page.









