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Robin’s Review of Obedience: The Guild Book One

Robin's Review Dread rating skulls

Title: Obedience : The Guild Book One

Author: Adrien Odera

Genres: Horror Suspense, Suspense Thrillers

Pages:  509

Source: Kindle, Paperback

Obedience : The Guild Book One

No one joins a cult on purpose.

Emma doesn’t remember how she got to the Guild. No one will tell her. The only thing her superiors ever say is “Be Obedient.”

Emma is done with Obedience. She wants a life: friends, a boyfriend, and a family who loves her. But being in the Guild is not a choice. It’s a life sentence.

When Emma begins to rebel against the rules, Leader tightens his hold. The Guilded cage he created crashes down, forcing her to make a choice: stay and obey, or fight to get free of his far-reaching authority.

No one joins a cult on purpose, but getting out requires a strategy.

Robin’s Review

Triggers: Cult dynamics, psychological manipulation, coercive control, emotional abuse, isolation

Star Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

Skull Dread Rating: ☠️☠️

What Did I Just Walk Into?

Emma lives in a place called the Guild where the motto might as well be “Don’t ask questions, just obey.” No one tells her how she got there. No one explains why the rules exist. They just repeat the same word over and over like it’s a magic spell that keeps the whole system standing. Obedience. Emma grows up believing this is normal life until the smallest cracks begin to appear. A friend here. A possibility there. Suddenly the life she was told was the only one available starts looking a lot like a cage.

Here’s What Slapped:

This book absolutely nails the psychology of indoctrination. Instead of turning the story into a loud cult thriller with dramatic robes and chanting, Adrien Odera focuses on the quiet ways control works. Isolation. Expectations. Punishments disguised as guidance. The Guild feels disturbingly believable because it is built on subtle pressure rather than constant spectacle. Emma is also a strong lead. Watching her slowly question the world she was raised in creates a slow burn tension that keeps the pages turning. Her relationships outside the Guild add warmth and make every small act of rebellion feel huge.

What Could’ve Been Better:

At over 500 pages this is definitely a commitment. Some readers who want constant action might find the pacing deliberate since the story leans heavily into Emma’s internal struggle and emotional journey. But honestly, the slow build is also what makes the psychological tension work.

Perfect for Readers Who Love:

Cult fiction that focuses on psychology rather than shock value

Character driven stories about identity and control

Slow burn tension with emotional depth

Stories about breaking free from systems designed to keep you small

Sum It Up:

Obedience is the kind of story that creeps into your brain and refuses to leave. Watching Emma slowly wake up to the truth about the Guild is equal parts hopeful and heartbreaking, and by the final pages you will absolutely be glaring at the calendar waiting for book two.

Reviewed by Robin for Robin’s Review

Walk With Me Into the Dark

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