We have updated our Privacy Policy Please take a moment to review it. By continuing to use this site, you agree to the terms of our updated Privacy Policy.

‘I was hooked from the very beginning and haunted for days’ S J Watson

The Feed is a unique, thought-provoking and utterly addictive post-apocalyptic thriller that fans of The Girl With All the Gifts and The Passage will love.

Your knowledge. Your memories. Your dreams.
If all you are is on the Feed, what will you become when the Feed goes down?

For Tom and Kate, in the six years since the world collapsed, every day has been a fight for survival. And when their daughter, Bea, goes missing, they will question whether they can even trust each other anymore.

The threat is closer than they realise…

‘A tense thriller … with a twist that will make your head explode’ C J Tudor

What's Inside

Read More Read Less

Reviews

I devoured this story barely putting it down . . . Highly recommended
<i>Liz Loves Books</i> blog
A tense thriller with a strong vein of the speculative. And that ending . . . blimey!
Den Patrick
A really clever and original book. A tense thriller wrapped up in a scarily plausible dystopian nightmare, with a twist that will make your head explode!
C. J. Tudor
What a riveting and original novel! The Feed is frighteningly believable and disturbing and I loved the way I was pulled into its dark reality, so convincing that it's almost unbearable. The Feed is one of those rare novels that changes your mind as you read it. It is such a brilliant exploration of the hive-mind, taken to chilling extremes which almost destroy humanity.
Helen Dunmore
The Feed is a chilling, dystopian page-turner - I was hooked from the very beginning and haunted for days after finishing it.
S J Watson
Nick Clark Windo's captivating debut is a dark, thought-provoking read. Tap into The Feed and it will change your world
Adam Hamdy
I really enjoyed it and what a great ending!
Martina Cole
[A] brilliant, highly charged debut
Daily Mail
Easily one of the most powerful and disturbing novels of the year . . . intensely original and constantly surprising . . . a visceral experience
Starburst
[An] admirable debut . . . succeeds as a sober, semi-satirical commentary on our connectivity-obsessed times
Financial Times
Splendid concept, beautifully and horrifyingly realised
<i>Espresso Coco</i> blog
Combining thriller with futuristic nightmare, Nick Clark Windo's debut novel presents an all too believable version of a near future . . . ambitious and thought-provoking
<i>S</i> magazine
An interesting post-apocalyptic science fiction novel that builds to a climax that embraces the three Hs - haunting, horrific and perhaps, hopeful
Science Fact and Science Fiction Concatenation
Terrifyingly, brilliantly plausible
Observer
Reminiscent of Cormac McCarthy's The Road. Windo's first novel is a noirish thriller told with verve and some fine plot twists.
Guardian