Robin’s Review of Revenge Arc


Title: Revenge Arc
Author: Cat Voleur
Genres: Epistolary Fiction, Psychological Horror, Psychological Thrillers
Pages: 166
Source: Kindle, Paperback
Revenge Arc
When controversial comic creator Riley Langdon is faced with an unimaginable crime committed in her name, she retreats from the spotlight she spent years seeking. But as media, fandom, and obsession churn, Riley’s story takes on a life of its own.
Riley Langdon has never shied from extreme horror, especially not in her deep web revenge comic, Red. But now that a cult fandom has put her on a pedestal, she doesn’t know how to respond to a mysterious death that too much resembles pages she wrote. As she tries to pick up the pieces of the life she’s made for herself, the fandom of Red turns against itself and an obsessed fan attempts to make the deep web what he hoped it would be. Told in blog posts, chat logs, emails, and more, Revenge Arc blends horror and mystery for an unforgettable experience.
Robin’s Review
Triggers: Abduction, violence, online harassment, obsession, psychological trauma
What Did I Just Walk Into?
An author writes an extreme horror comic, a cult fandom takes it too far, and reality starts blurring with the darkest corners of the web. Told through chat logs, blog posts, emails, and social media fragments, Revenge Arc feels like you accidentally stumbled into a cursed Google Drive folder.
Here’s What Slapped:
Cat Voleur doesn’t just tell a story, she builds an experience. Every screenshot, every log entry, every cryptic post pulls you deeper into the spiral. It’s immersive, unsettling, and disturbingly believable. Riley Langdon is a mess in the best way—flawed, defensive, traumatized, and so real you’ll find yourself scrolling back to double-check what’s fiction and what might not be.
The format is perfection for this kind of tale. It gives the same voyeuristic chill as reading someone’s hacked DMs or late-night subreddit confession. And beneath all the horror, there’s a sharp commentary on fandom culture, creator accountability, and the way the internet feeds on tragedy.
What Could’ve Been Better:
Only that I wish it had been longer. I wanted more screenshots, more comic panels, more of the creeping digital rot seeping into every page.
Perfect for Readers Who Love:
Epistolary horror told through digital fragments
Meta-commentary on fandoms and creators
Creepy realism that feels one refresh away from real life
Stories that make you question how much the internet knows about you
Reviewed by Robin for Robin’s Review
Walk With Me Into the Dark


