Book Reviews

I read books and say things about them.

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A Sorceress Comes to Call

Filled with Kingfisher’s trademark humor and horror, Sorceress was another fun listen. The audiobook changed narrators between the primary POVs and made it easy to follow. 

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Model Home

The story of this family from the perspective of the gender-fluid Ezri, who narrated most of it, was heart-felt and not short on horrors of several kinds. 

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Listen to Your Sister

When listening to the audiobook version, how much weight do you give the text vs, the production? If you’re lucky, they will roughly match, so you don’t have to feel like one is dragging down the overall rating.

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Haunt Sweet Home

Haunt Sweet Home was a quick, fun listen. Imagine if your favorite ghost hunting show hosts encounter an actual ghost - now add a relatable main character and an unexpected explanation.

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Murder in the Appalachians

I was excited to read a mystery set in the Appalachians, but I was a little disappointed with this one because the place and people didn’t seem distinctly Appalachian.

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The Devil’s Colony

If you’re looking for a theory on the lost colony of Roanoke full of witches and spice which is also well-researched and a fun read, this is the book for you.

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The Haunting of Room 904

The Haunting of Room 904 was an enjoyable listen. Part supernatural investigation, part historical and current experience of indigenous Americans, with plenty of humor and just enough romance.

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Never Whistle at Night: An Indigenous Dark Fiction Anthology

With settings as far ranging as Alaska to Florida and even to the Old World, main characters with a variety of motivations and morals, and drawing out fear, tears, laughter, and an occasional WTF? the stories in Never Whistle at Night shine a light on indigenous Americans and their folklore, traditions, and lives.

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Sick Houses

Overall, as a fan of haunted and “sick” houses, it was an enjoyable reminder of the houses I’ve read about and seen in film and was fun to learn a little more about those and others I wasn’t aware of.

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Demo Reels and Arthouse Madness

This is a book to have hand to turn to for one’s own horror writing inspiration through imagery (Forum & Void), to be reminded that everyone suffers in their day job (Monday Shutdown), or even for a mad kind of hope (Lost Traveler).

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Old Soul

In Old Soul, Susan Barker does a masterful job of introducing each piece of the puzzle in the form of “testimonies” from characters spread across the globe and many years, building up to a very satisfying conclusion.

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Victorian Psycho

Two of my favorite books are Jane Eyre and The Turn of the Screw - classic Victorian governess stories - and Victorian Psycho is a new classic for me.

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Love is a Crematorium and Other Tales

Love Is a Crematorium starts with a strong introduction from Gabino Iglesias, and his promise of what you will find in Mercedes Yardley's stories is fulfilled in the most perfectly gut-wrenching way. 

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The Reformatory

Sometimes the hype is right. The Reformatory has horror - both the deep, existential kind and the turn on all the lights to scare the shadows away kind, it has tragedy - big tragedy like the system was and is broken and personal tragedy, it has tension, it has humor.

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The Lamplighter

The Lamplighter is a YA novel which tend to be hit or miss for me, and this one has some of the pitfalls that make it a miss, such as overwrought, almost melodramatic language, but inconsistently so which makes it feel unintentional and unnecessary. However, there was a lot I liked about it.

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House of Cotton

House of Cotton, though it had horror elements, was not scary (except in the way that living as a woman in society is scary).

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Withered

If I could ask for anything from Withered, it would be “more”, especially as relates to the inner workings of Ellis’ mind.

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Grey Dog

Grey Dog lulls you into a sense of security with its opening chapters, a first person narrative of an unwed woman on her way to a new teaching position.

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Secrets & Sacrifices

While having some knowledge of Call of Cthulhu or Lovecraftian mythos in general would provide some fun Easter eggs, Lauria is effective at describing the rituals and monsters that anyone would enjoy this Regency horror with a touch of “fake dating” romance.

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