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The Militia House

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Stephen King meets Tim O’Brien in John Milas’s The Militia House, a spine-tingling and boldly original gothic horror novel.

It’s 2010, and the recently promoted Corporal Loyette and his unit are finishing up their deployment at a new base in Kajaki, Afghanistan. Their duties here are straightforward―loading and unloading cargo into and out of helicopters―and their days are a mix of boredom and dread. The Brits they’re replacing delight in telling them the history of the old barracks just off base, a Soviet-era militia house they claim is haunted, and Loyette and his men don’t need much convincing to make a clandestine trip outside the wire to explore it.

It’s a short, middle-of-the-day adventure, but the men experience a mounting agitation after their visit to the militia house. In the days that follow they try to forget about the strange, unsettling sights and sounds from the house, but things are increasingly . . . not right. Loyette becomes determined to ignore his and his marines’ growing unease, convinced that it’s just the strain of war playing tricks on them. But something about the militia house will not let them go.

Meticulously plotted and viscerally immediate in its telling, The Militia House is a gripping and brilliant exploration of the unceasing horrors of war that’s no more easily shaken than the militia house itself.

272 pages, Hardcover

First published July 11, 2023

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John Milas

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 328 reviews
Profile Image for John Mauro.
Author 6 books789 followers
July 13, 2023
My complete review of The Militia House is published at Grimdark Magazine.

The Militia House is the debut horror novel from John Milas, a U.S. Marine Corps veteran who was deployed to Afghanistan in 2010. Milas brings his personal experience to The Militia House, which gives the first-person account of newly promoted Corporal Loyette, whose unit is assigned to a base in Kajaki, Afghanistan, in the same year as the author’s own deployment.

Loyette and his crew are replacing British soldiers who tell the Americans eerie stories of a nearby abandoned barracks. This so-called Militia House was the site of a massacre of Soviet soldiers at the end of the Soviet Union’s occupation of Afghanistan in 1989.

The daily life of the soldiers is quite monotonous, and curiosity gets the best of Loyette and his unit as they explore the Militia House. They soon find strange unaccountable writings and become plagued by nightmares.

John Milas’s writing is well-honed, particularly for a debut novel. The author’s real-life experiences as a marine in Afghanistan enable him to give a realistic depiction of a soldier’s life on duty. Loyette’s narration flows smoothly, aside from the occasional use of military jargon and an odd obsession with Nicki Minaj that seems an awkward fit for the rest of the novel.

The first half of The Militia House is rather slow paced, reflecting the dullness of a typical soldier’s life during deployment. But the unsettling nature of The Militia House gradually builds throughout the novel, leading up to a perfectly executed climax that kept me flipping the pages till the very end.

Milas is especially adept at describing the emotional tolls of deployment in a war zone, even for soldiers who have not seen direct combat. The onset of post-traumatic stress disorder can be subtle, often manifesting in unconscious ways. Milas also explores the impact on military families, both during their loved ones’ deployment in dangerous locales so far from home and in the aftermath of their service.

Corporal Loyette has been deeply affected by the loss of his older brother, who died during his own military service and is viewed by everyone as a hero. Many of Loyette’s decisions are driven by him questioning his own self-worth considering his brother’s sacrifice.

One peculiarity of The Militia House is that the Afghan people play essentially no role in the story. It would have been interesting to consider how the interactions between the occupying soldiers and local people could have influenced the plot.

Overall, The Militia House is a highly accomplished debut horror rooted in reality. The horror elements gradually creep up on the reader, reflecting both the terror of experiencing an active war zone and the psychological tolls experienced by soldiers in the aftermath of their deployment.
Profile Image for Jessica Woodbury.
1,779 reviews2,658 followers
April 10, 2023
There is a lot to like here, a horror novel set in a place of actual horrors. Some great creepy elements and the last third is fantastic, which is usually the opposite of what you normally see in a horror novel.

It's hard to get mad about one of its major weaknesses, the pacing. Because it's so important for Milas to establish the monotony of Loyette's life on a small military outpost in Afghanistan. I think you could have still really gotten that monotony across but started building tension earlier. It took a long time for the tension to reach a more palpable point, too long, in my opinion. But I get what Milas is going for and he's good at establishing the boredom and misery for these characters.

Milas doesn't hit you over the head with the metaphor here, he gives you plenty of the monotony as well as the futility. The work Loyette's team is doing is specific and dull, but the mission they are enabling is another question. They unload giant guns, they unload ammunition, will these guns do nothing? Will they kill civilians? We will never know and neither will Loyette. It could be either one. The horrors when they do come reflect the pointlessness of it all, the cycle of war after war fought for no real purpose, with no real design, inflicting pain upon pain.

One thing that nagged at me is how we see maybe one Afghan person in the entire novel. That detachment from the people they are either saving or slaughtering is certainly purposeful, and it may well be accurate, but it only served to remind me of just how much work was done to hide the human toll of it all. The novel only continues this pattern, and while I see Milas' reasons for it, I couldn't shake some discomfort.

As a horror novel, it is a very slow burn but when they come the scary stuff is the kind of stuff that can linger in your brain. It's not going to really scare most readers but it will leave you feeling unsettled and even disturbed, which is just as it should be.
Profile Image for Lizzie Stewart.
414 reviews360 followers
June 14, 2023
The Militia House is a debut novel by John Milas, a veteran who studied creative writing under Roxane Gay. A horror novel set in war-torn Afghanistan, The Militia House follows Corporal Loyette, whose day-to-day is a boring stream of mundane tasks without any larger context. Desperate for stimulation, he and his unit are drawn to a nearby building called The Militia House, which is purported to be the haunted sight of a last stand between rival factions that resulted in some men being skinned alive. After visiting The Militia House, Loyette and his unit begin to have strange, unsettling experiences they can't explain - strange dreams, phantom sensations, finding porcupine quills. They begin to be unable to trust even their own memory. The Militia House is a clever representation of the horrors of war and PTSD through a horror set at war and a propulsive read. While I wish that more of an explanation had been given at the end for the experiences had by the characters throughout this book, the lack of explanation made the book even more unsettling and paralleled well with the trauma of shooting and killing and not fully knowing why. A fabulous debut - I highly recommend it!

✅ Debut Novel
✅ Written by a Veteran
✅ Horror
✅ Military Fiction

Thanks so much to John Milas and Henry Holt & Company for this ARC through NetGalley. The Militia House will be available for purchase July 11th, 2023!
Profile Image for Fiona Cook (back and catching up!).
1,341 reviews279 followers
July 19, 2023
All I can think in the moment is this: I am not a compassionate person. I didn't come here to help, not people and not dogs.

The blurb describes this as Stephen King meets Tim O'Brien, but for my money the closer cross is House of Leaves with Jugheads; and like House of Leaves, a hauntingly good premise was let down by a flubbed ending and a lack of the depth I was looking for from the story.

It starts off well, with a small group of Marines on a desert base, bored and in a state of flux that leaves them unsettled and looking for distraction from anything out of the ordinary. John Milas does a great job with building those relationships, given the narrator's lack of real care about most things and people around him; I felt like I knew him, and the military details rang very true.

On the other hand though, the ending was frustrating; House of Leaves similarly let me down after intriguing me throughout, and I wanted more from The Militia House, too. Ambiguity is one thing, but both books felt like they wanted to say something and just couldn't quite get it out. And I wanted more from the hints of tension with the locals, from the militia house itself, from the threads left dangling that never quite went anywhere. All of them were touched on but too briefly; enough that I felt them missing and wanted to see where they could have gone.

It's definitely a promising debut here, despite the issues I had with it. I'll be really interested to see what John Milas puts out next.
Profile Image for Stitching Ghost.
1,017 reviews232 followers
September 6, 2023
Gothic horror isn't my jam so take my review with a grain of salt.
It's not a bad novel and there's certainly a striking imagery I just wish Milas had done more with it because as it is it feels a little rushed and lacking in payoff.
Profile Image for Justine.
1,252 reviews348 followers
April 17, 2024
I'm coming down from the adrenaline rush and I'm thinking about all this bullshit. I could still be in college somewhere else, somewhere better than this. How fucking naive was I to think wearing a uniform would be better than school? How stupid was I to think it was worth signing up to die instead of fixing the things about my life that were broken? How stupid were any of us to think this was just an adventure? We've treated this like it's all been about sightseeing, writing blogs, posting pictures on Facebook, getting medals, tax-free pay, showing off, and telling war stories to people back home who don’t know any better.

A fantastic slow build horror book that examines the weird juxtaposition of banality and surreality of war, mixed with the frightening decay of one’s own mind and fracturing of reality.

With absolutely effective use of an increasingly unreliable narrator, John Milas ratchets the tension with a slow but inexorable hand. This was especially effective with the masterful narration in the audiobook version. The utterance of the final line literally gave me chills. An amazing debut by a talented new author to watch.

”No one made me join the Marines or come to Afghanistan. I chose both of those. All of this has been worthless. I would have never known the truth if I hadn't come here with a gun like people have been doing since before I was old enough to enlist. Since before I was born. No one back home knows what it's like here because they weren't as desperate as I was. They're all so lucky they can ignore everything. I wish I was like them. But now I'm stuck here, and I'll never be able to tell them what it's like. They'll keep living their busy, important lives forgetting there's a war happening here. I can't move. I can't move and it's too late. Too late for everything. There's nowhere to go. Nothing else to think about. I wish the militia house would send me somewhere else again, somewhere good, just one last time.
Profile Image for laurel [the suspected bibliophile].
1,722 reviews640 followers
October 20, 2023
The GWOT version of "Hotel California."

You can check-out any time you like but you can never leave.

The way this captured...so many things about the Marine Corps that I just can't put into words (although I never went to Afghanistan).

tbh I'm laughing at some of the civilian reviews.

*bumping up to five stars because I don't think this one is going to leave my head for a while.
Profile Image for Sara the Librarian.
808 reviews677 followers
August 26, 2023
Something bad happened there.

So many haunted house stories start off that way.

Sometimes its nothing more than whispered rumor. No one knows quite what happened but it was bad and it left a mark that lingers. Sometimes its nothing more than a bad feeling, a little shiver down the spine as you walk past on a chilly fall night. Sometimes its just a fleeting shadow in the corner of your eye that isn't too hard to write off even as it leaves you wondering.

And sometimes a place is so deeply marked with violence and hatred and death that the very air reeks of it. Its seductive and repulsive in equal measures. Impossible to resist even as you're retching and clawing at the walls to escape.

The militia house is that kind of haunted house.

I've never read a book quite like this one. I'm not a fan of war or political fiction and couldn't tell you the first thing about the history of the American military that I haven't picked up from the occasional news story or movie trailer. But I cannot resist a good ghost story.

This one is set in post 9/11 Afghanistan and its protagonist, Loyette, is a corporal who finds himself deployed to a new base in remote Kajaki with a group of marines he barley knows. Though he's technically been promoted his star is not exactly on the rise after his blog posts about daily marine life come to the attention of his superiors.

He's also plagued by feelings of inadequacy and uselessness, unable to see his role as anything other than one more cog in a machine that serves no purpose. His days are spent leading his men in the shifting and organizing of supplies as troops move in and out of the town. His nights are sleepless and full of regret for a life half lived and taken for granted.

So when some British marines about to ship out offer to show his men "the militia house" and share a grisly story about its past he agrees to let them all go despite some vague misgivings he can't quite pinpoint.

What follows is equal parts existential dread as a soldier confronts the realities of war and his part in it and surreal, visceral horror that unfolds like the nightmare lovechild of Lynch and Cronenberg.

The overwhelming feeling I was left with after finishing this was loneliness. Just the desperate, endless loneliness of losing yourself and any real sense of purpose in the mindless, hopeless drudgery of this kind of life. The kind of loneliness that could lead, effortlessly, into madness.

John Milas's writing is simple and stunning in its sparse, biting execution. His words feel like gun shots. Clipped and humorless and sometimes deeply painful. There's a particular quote I keep coming back to.

We hardly know anything. And we never really learned why we're still here after so many years, like why haven't we gotten Osama yet? No one has ever answered for that, because answering for that doesn't change things from our perspective. Our job is to do what we're told. No one brought us here to think or learn.

This is not a pleasant book and not a ghost story in the traditional sense but it is deeply haunting and beautifully written. Highly recommend, but not for the faint of heart.
Profile Image for Poptart19 (the name’s ren).
1,027 reviews5 followers
May 7, 2023
3.5 stars

A very creepy book set on a NATO base in Afghanistan, where things aren’t exactly what they seem. It kept me engaged to the end, but I wish there had been a bit more explanation of the haunting.

[What I liked:]

•I don’t read a lot of horror or war novels, but this book felt unique to me. The horror isn’t tied to the current conflict happening in the story, at least not on the surface. Unlike his brother, Alex (the MC) doesn’t seem to have experienced much violence during his deployment. The horror has more to do (I think) with his personal insecurities than anything, which was interesting.

•The story wasn’t very suspenseful until halfway through, but it definitely felt creepy almost from the start. By the end, it felt practically Twilight Zone level of uncanny valley. Personal preference, but I prefer scary stories that rely more on an unnerving dread than on gruesomeness.


[What I didn’t like as much:]

•So the house was haunted because some Soviet soldiers were killed there. How does that connect to porcupines or the drawings? Who/what was actually haunting the place? Why was that entity trying to punish Alex & his fellow marines? I was hoping that by the end there would be some more depth to the symbolism, or hints of the motivation behind the malevolence, but there wasn’t.

•Some aspects of the ending were very disconcerting & creepy, but the very last chapter just confused me; who was Alex apologizing to, & why did they seem to listen? What actually happened at the end? It was rather muddled.

CW: mentions of combat death & torture, racism, substance abuse, psychological horror, animal injury

[I received an ARC ebook copy from NetGalley in exchange for my honest review. Thank you for the book!]
This entire review has been hidden because of spoilers.
Profile Image for Jaksen.
1,504 reviews81 followers
November 14, 2023
Very good. Excellently creepy. Set in an entirely different locale, for a haunted house story, that is.

Corporal Alex Layotte is in charge of three other marines. In Afghanistan, 2010. Their jobs are sort of ordinary, routine, bordering on drudgery, but they do them and they do them well. Basically, it's unloading and loading military supplies at a small base camp out in the desert. It's hot, dry, miserable out there. They have enough food, place to sleep, but not much else but boredom, and sometimes, pointless rules they have to follow - without question!

And so they do, but the thing is this - nearby is an abandoned 'militia house' left by the Russians. Stories say it's the location where a group of Russian soldiers were ambushed, tortured and murdered. The place is now a dump filled with garbage, but things about it seem a little 'off,' and so...

In real life would any of us go into an abandoned building anywhere, of any kind, that seems a little 'off?' Well, of course we would! (I know I did as a kid; my building was a boarded-up church.) So naturally they find a way to explore the place and that's when...

Spoilersville!

This is more than just a haunted house story, btw. It's also about what it feels like to be a soldier in a dirty, rotten war, to take orders without question, to accept whatever comes your way. It's also about coming home to certain expectations and finding everything is just 'wrong,' because that world feels as 'off' as the militia house itself.

This is an interesting, compelling and fascinating read. Mystery and horror alongside the inner life of a confused young man trying to justify his life choices while also facing something much bigger than himself.

Highly recommended.

Five stars.
Profile Image for Sam  Hughes.
799 reviews66 followers
April 20, 2023
OH MY GOSH. THIS ONE WAS IMMACULATELY DONE.
Holy forking shirt balls, I am still friggin flabbergasted.

I am so thankful to John Milas, Henry Holt Books, NetGalley, and Macmillan Audio for granting me advanced audiobook access to this horrifically excellent piece of art before it publishes on July 11, 2023.

The Militia House is a somewhat novella-based story detailing the horrors of war in Afghanistan, where even the troops had no idea what they were doing in the country, trapped in a haze from the blisteringly brutal heat waves, left seeing supposed ghosts and terrifying occurrences after venturing into the infamous "Militia House" that sits abandoned and neglected outside their base.

When a soldier known to sleep-walk, talk, and ramble in a somewhat possessed state goes missing, the remaining battalion is left dumbstruck, not doing what to believe out of the fear of being called crazy. When Corporal Loyette is sent home earlier than expected, he has difficulty reintegrating into normal everyday, suburban life, haunted by the ghosts of his time in combat.

Those ghosts, disguised and symbolizing PTSD in reality, seem to follow him home, plaguing his every move and keeping him from normalcy until these old-world demons have completed their mission.

I feel like I've read several ghost stories from ex-military members and veterans detailing the ages-old tales and legends that have left privateers quaking in their boots, and it's even more interesting to read a fictional instance of this genuine issue surrounding PTSD and veteran treatment as a whole. Very well done.
Profile Image for Whitney.
141 reviews95 followers
February 11, 2024
This book was amazing. Character, setting, and the supernatural elements all combined perfectly. I expect this book is going to be a sleeper that slowly finds its much larger audience.

Unlike much military horror, there are no great battles or monsters on the battlefield. There’s also no hearty, false comradery. Loyette is a kid doing the best he can. He’s a low-level marine with a sudden responsibility for three other men he barely knows. He’s cut off from his friends and family at a forward base in Afghanistan, subject to the whims of superiors, and kept in the dark about everything outside his immediate responsibility (as is the way of the military). When an ill-defined horror from the nearby militia house starts eating away at his perceptions, he has no resources outside his own, already strained psyche.

I would call this a slow-burn, cosmic horror. When strange things start happening, there’s always plenty of doubt: Is this something normal for the situation? Is this just in the characters' heads? Is one of the other marines messing with them? Have you ever had the experience of someone in a foreign country doing something that seems really messed up, but you aren’t sure how much of it may be normal for the culture? Multiply that by 100.

As others have said, there is a lot of detail about the day to day at the base. I didn’t find any of it tiresome; it effectively showed the bizarreness creeping into the mundane. Also, as with much cosmic horror, don’t expect easy answers or a nice, neat resolution.

Some comps I see with this book are Jonathan Raab, Tim O’Brian, Laird Barron, and House of Leaves.
Profile Image for Michael Erickson.
170 reviews57 followers
October 16, 2023
It is so refreshing to come across a horror novel that feels like it's trying to say something new instead of the umpteenth exploration into grief that we've all seen before. I mean, not for the characters it isn't - they went through some shit - but I as a reader got a lot of enjoyment out of this one.

Spoiler-free rundown is that an American unit is replacing a British squadron at a base in the middle of nowhere, 2010 Afghanistan. There's an abandoned building on a hill overlooking the base that the Brits claimed is where a bunch of Soviet soldiers were brutally killed back in the 70's and it's best to stay away from it. After weeks of mindless logistics and no word on when they're leaving, the Americans eventually get bored, go to check it out, and things go downhill from there.

To me the central theme here was regret, but a certain flavor of regret that is unique to soldiers. And I'm not talking about regret over taking a life; the protagonist never sees real combat (although the few close-calls with Taliban insurgents were extremely suspenseful). Without giving too much away, I felt it was more about regrets over decisions, particularly from an officer who has people under him who's lives hinge on him making the right call. But also there were some other regrets the main character harbored that had lesser ramifications than life-or-death matters that civilians could also relate to.

Corporal Loyette was an interesting protagonist who you could tell always had a lot more going on in his head than he was sharing with the others around him. But what really got me was that past the halfway point of the book he drops that he's only 22 years old, and a lot of my previous judgements of him converted to thoughts of "Jesus, you're just a kid..." (This is especially evident when he finally gets back home from deployment and tries adjusting back into civilian life.) And what made that easier for me was that I was only 21 myself in 2010; had I dropped out of college and joined the military like he did, I could've had a life similar to some of the peripheral characters in this book.

This is really nitpicky, but in my head I'm giving this one a 4.75 stars, but I'll just round up here. The very end of the book sort of hit a trope I don't usually care for and had an initial disappointment towards, but after marinating on it for a bit I could see the logic behind ending the story that way. And I still enjoyed so much of the rest of the book that I'm not gonna let that hold me back from recommending this one to horror fans who are looking for a unique setting and tone.
Profile Image for Lisa.
287 reviews28 followers
August 29, 2024
Incredible novel. Terrifying. I think sadly people are turned off by the military aspect of this novel which is a huge bummer because it's so well written. Horrifying , and genuinely scary. I really loved this one.
Profile Image for Cheryl.
1,051 reviews
August 14, 2023
Psychological horror novel set in 2010 Afghanistan during the Afghanistan war. It focuses on a supernatural force that inhabits an abandoned militia house from the Soviet era. The horror has a slow build up, with a creeping sense of dread for those who had gone inside the militia house. The story also deals with the futility of this war.

Fans of books like House of Leaves, The Turn of the Screw, and Come Closer by Sara Gran might like this book. A bit more subtle and ambiguous than many other horror stories but I liked it.
450 reviews10 followers
March 5, 2023
"No one made me join the Marines or come to Afghanistan. I chose both of those. All of this has been worthless. I would have never known the truth if I hadn't come here with a gun like people have been doing since before I was old enough to enlist. Since before I was born. No one back home knows what it's like here because they weren't as desperate as I was. They're all so lucky they can ignore everything. I wish I was like them. But now I'm stuck here, and I'll never be able to tell them what it's like. They'll keep living their busy, important lives forgetting there's a war happening here. I can't move, I can't move and it's too late. Too late for everything."

This is a neat slow burn horror. Corporal Loyette is deployed with his unit in Afghanistan. One day, a British unit tells them of an old soviet base nearby called the Militia house that's supposedly haunted, and Loyette and a few others decide to check it out. There's not much to see in the House, but soon after Loyette and the others start having strange dreams. It becomes clear that he and others have been changed by going into the house.

This is also a really good and harsh look at the realities of war for our soldiers overseas, and the trials they go through. The author is a veteran himself, and that's why these parts felt so authentic to read.

It took a while for the story to really grab me, which is why in the end it's a 3.5 star read for me.

Thank you netgalley and Henry Holt & Company for giving me an advanced review copy of this book in exchange for an honest review.


Profile Image for Rachel Martin.
360 reviews
July 15, 2023
Oooh. This is one I'd love to discuss and get input from other people.

This was a horror story unlike any I've read. Much of the book is spent describing the monotony of the main character's life as a soldier in Afghanistan; this purposeful decision then gives way to a fucking wild ride that is the rest of the book. It is insanely unsettling with the militia house being an insidious entity.

I do wish a few more connections were made: like why the porcupine quills, the drawings on the wall, the dog. Besides being creepy, I didn't really understand their relation to the militia house.

If you're looking to feel unsettled, this is the horror book for you.
Profile Image for Veeral.
367 reviews132 followers
August 16, 2023
Although nothing much exciting happens in the book, there's a continuous feeling of desolation to the whole setup for which the author should be commended for maintaining it throughout the whole story.
Profile Image for Coleman.
318 reviews18 followers
January 31, 2024
Lance Corporal Loyette is deployed to a landing zone in a seeming wasteland of sand and rock deep in rural Afghanistan, where he faces the modern horrors of war: The boredom of a desert with no electricity, no showers, no good meals, and absolutely nothing to do. The responsibility of leading a unit that he struggles to get to know, made up of men who don’t really respect him as the middle manager that he is. The knowledge that his job is bullshit, that this war is bullshit, and that all he can do about it is follow orders until his deployment ends. The memory of his brother, who died after he stepped on an IED while stationed elsewhere. The guilt over following in his brother’s footsteps into the marines to run away from his failures at school and relationships at home, desperate to garner the same respect and admiration that his hero brother received from his family.

Oh and by the way there’s also this haunted house.

The titular Militia House is an abandoned soviet barracks that sticks out like a black stone in the middle of the sand. There is something about it; something unwelcoming and bleak. The rumor is that a Russian military unit was massacred there. The truth is that there is nothing inside it worth investigating. And yet, the monotony of this deployment makes it the most intriguing place Loyette and his unit have seen in months, and it draws them to it.

After Loyette and his unit go on a brief excursion to check out the house, strange things start to happen around the landing zone. Drawings seem to move on their own, soldiers start talking in their sleep, Loyette finds porcupine quills everywhere, and tensions and unease rise among the men. Loyette wants everyone to do their job and just suck it up until their deployment is over, but even he can’t help but feel the dread of the militia house, and the way it seems to be pulling them all back…

The choice of setting for a gothic horror is brilliant. The existential dread of the supernatural militia house goes hand-in-hand with the existential dread of war. Reading (or rather listening to) this felt like watching the latest A24 film. It takes its time, paints these desolate scenes, and lets the tension build and build to an incredible climax that I won’t spoil here. Check this one out.
Profile Image for Bbecca_marie.
964 reviews28 followers
August 22, 2023
Corporal Loyette and his unit are finishing up their deployment at a new base in Kajaki, Afghanistan. Their duties include loading and unloading cargo with their days filled with boredom and dread. They were told the history of the old barracks just off base, a Soviet-era militia house allegedly haunted. Corporal Loyette and his men don't need much convincing to go take a look for themselves, with the militia house being just outside the wire. The days following their adventure, they try to forget the strange sights and sounds from the house, but something is not right. Convinced that the strain of war is playing tricks on them, Loyette is determined to ignore their feelings.

The Militia House is creepy, and you can feel it from the start. Who knew porcupines could be so sinister? I found this book to be unique and creative and knowing a little military language was helpful for me to follow along. I also like that this was written by a veteran, and I can imagine that those in the military or those who were in the military would enjoy its familiarity and enjoy reading it and getting a little scared. I wanted to give it all the stars, but I was left with some unanswered questions. Overall, I enjoyed the read and I plan to keep it on my forever shelves. If you're looking for something different to read and want to get a little spooked out, give this one a shot!

Happy reading.
Profile Image for Cassie.
1,562 reviews133 followers
October 14, 2023
We hardly know anything. And we never really learned why we're still here after so many years, like why haven't we gotten Osama yet? No one has ever answered for that, because answering for that doesn't change things from our perspective. Our job is to do what we're told. No one brought us here to think or learn.

The year is 2010, and Corporal Alex Loyette and his crew of Marines have just arrived in Kajaki, Afghanistan, to finish up their deployment on a new base. When they arrive, they immediately notice the blocky, abandoned barracks off-base: a Soviet-era militia house that the British soldiers they are there to relieve tell them has a dark history, and is rumored to be haunted. Eager for a break from their monotonous duties (loading and unloading cargo from helicopters), Loyette and his crew decide to sneak off-base and explore the militia house.

What should be an exciting mid-day diversion from their dull responsibilities turns into something much more unsettling, because after returning from their jaunt to the militia house, Loyette and his men begin experiencing strange events: nightmares, hallucinations, a mounting sense of unease they can't escape. Loyette tries to write it all off as the stress of active duty, but he can't shake the feeling that the militia house isn't done with them yet.

John Milas draws on his lived experiences as a Marine who served in Afghanistan to immerse the reader in the life of a soldier: the monotony and tedium, the psychological and emotional toll, the sense of isolation and the lack of autonomy. He spends the first two-thirds of the book exploring the drudgery of an active-duty soldier's days, letting us get to know Loyette intimately. We learn about his past, his struggles both in his private life and during his time with the Marines, the events and people that have made him into the hardened, hopeless, seemingly unfeeling man he is. The Militia House reads like Loyette's diary -- meaning that parts of it are a bit boring, but also that it is a fascinating, deeply psychological character study.

The last third of the book is absolutely stellar, as the horror that has been quietly and subtly building the entire time is unleashed in a conclusion that I am still thinking about, more than a week after I finished reading the book. It's ambiguous and bleak and so perfectly exemplifies the futility, trauma, and brutality of modern warfare and its effects on those who serve.

Military fiction is not typically a genre that interests me. I picked this up because it sounded like a haunted house story, and I love those. And well, it is a story about ghosts, and about being haunted -- just not the kind I expected. The Militia House may not be a typical ghost story, but it will haunt me all the same. 3.5 stars rounded up.
Profile Image for Jordan (Forever Lost in Literature).
874 reviews126 followers
July 11, 2023
Find this review at Forever Lost in Literature!

The Militia House is the perfect quiet, creeping horror to fill your long summer days. It is John Milas’ debut horror novel and is set in Kajaki, Afghanistan in 2010 during the war. I listened to the audiobook version of The Militia House and absolutely devoured it–this is sure to be a book that I will continue to think about and possibly re-read for many years.

We follow Corporel Loyette as he and his unit are moved to a new base in Afghanistan where a British unit has already been stationed. Loyette is unsettled by a few odd occurrences he notices around base, but thinks nothing of it outside of his mind playing tricks on him. However, Loyette and his unit are soon informed by the British unit of an abandoned militia house nearby that was the site of a violence battle and is now believed to be haunted.

Since Loyette and his unit are sufficiently bored on base, they manage to plan a visit to the site, where they have a deeply unnerving experience that they op to ignore and not talk about with anyone else once they make it safely back to base. Unfortunately, things don’t go right back to normal as each individual person seems to begin having uniquely odd experiences that begin to put strains on the group as they attempt to maintain an existence in this war-torn area where all they have is themselves and one another.

Milas does an excellent job at conveying the monotonous reality of living on base in Afghanistan and the many different ways in which it can begin to affect each person’s mental wellbeing. At the same time, Milas also does an excellent job at exploring the psychological aspects of being at war, including PTSD, difficulties adapting to civilian life, and how the aforementioned monotony can create varying levels of uncertainty among a unit.

While The Militia House is military horror and there are many war experiences mentioned, there is not much of an emphasis on military action itself in the present, which for me worked well on keeping the attention focused on Loyette and some of the more psychological components of the story. I really appreciated Milas’ exploration of war and introspection concerning the moral and ethics surrounding war and the soldiers’ experiences.

The Militia House is not a horror story that really throws things in your face and focuses on gore and shock value, but rather one that focuses on the slow burn build up of unease and a sense of haunting that slowly builds into a crescendo that truly echoes long after the last page is closed. It is incredibly disquieting is the type of book that is full of images and ideas that are sure to stick around in your head for far longer than you’d like them to.

Milas has a writing style that is both simple and complex in how he crafts his ideas and subsequently conveys them in ways that left me riveted to every word. There is a perfect blend of detail and description mixed in with just enough left unsaid to really impart a sense of terror at the unknown. I will also warn you that this is a story that falls into more of the open ending territory, and I think this was the perfect choice for Milas to end his story with. It probably won't be for everyone–in fact, I'm sure some people will probably end up quite frustrated–but I thought it was the perfect ending to match this atmospheric tale of creeping horror.

Overall, I’ve given The Militia House five stars! This is a stunningly written work of military horror that filled me with dread until the very last page (and honestly still does) and I genuinely cannot wait to see what’s next from Milas.

*I received a copy of The Militia House courtesy of the publisher in exchange for an honest review.*
Profile Image for Lorin (paperbackbish).
887 reviews22 followers
July 17, 2023
Read this if:
🎖️you or a loved one have served in the military
👻 you’re into creepy atmospheric horror
🎬 you can handle an ambiguous ending

The Militia House is a debut novel that knocks it out of the park! I’ll be straight with you, there is a LOT of US military jargon and acronyms up front — most of which I’m already familiar with — but don’t let this turn you off if you feel confused. It’s not vital to the story that you know what NCO stands for, because you will contextually understand that it’s a person. That being said, have a search browser nearby to look all this stuff up and learn about it if you’re curious!

Anyway, the book. It takes a while to get into the “creepy” stuff, but man is it satisfying!! This is a clever and nuanced read, pairing true-to-life experiences in the military with chilling supernatural encounters. It’s also pretty heartbreaking, which I didn’t expect. But wow, am I excited to see what John Milas writes next.

Thank you Henry Holt & Co. for my gifted advance copy!
Profile Image for Cindy.
383 reviews37 followers
October 18, 2023
Not what I was expecting for a horror story. The depiction of military life in Afghanistan was vivid. My dad (Vietnam) and husband (Iraq) were in the military and Milas’s observations, reactions, and thoughts were so descriptive that I could relate to their stories told by my family. Lots of military terms were used so I had my own personal wikipedia, asking my husband about them. I didn’t know Milas was ex-military but thought he has to be to describe it so well.Halfway through I read the back bio and low and behold, I was right.
Profile Image for Maddy (maddys_needful_reads).
208 reviews35 followers
August 14, 2023
"At first, you see nothing, and then you'll wish you saw nothing."

The Militia House is like if Tim O'Brien and Michael McDowell had a nightmare right after reading House of Leaves. I say house of Leaves not because it has a similar format, but because I haven't been this afraid of a haunted house since I read House of Leaves.

The entire book has a creeping sense of dread. It has short chapters that read like journal entries, making the book feel real and authentic. The syntax matches the pace of the plot, leaving the reader breathless. And the ending? Wow. Perfection.

As an aside, there is a lot of military jargon, especially in the beginning, that was off-putting to me at first. After looking up some terms, though, I got used to it and had no problems. So don't let that discourage you!
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