Book Reviews

I read books and say things about them.

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The Sundowner’s Dance

The Sundowner’s Dance cannot be reduced to being called a “horror novel” - not that it isn’t because it is: part psychological thriller, part Invasion of the Body Snatchers, but it’s also a story of grief: grieving the loss of loved ones and of self and of fear: the fear of death and of losing oneself both physically and mentally.

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Overgrowth

Alien stories are not my usual go-to, but Mira Grant’s stories are always thrilling, and Overgrowth is no exception.

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Hungerstone

A modern, sexy story of a woman who is hungry for love, freedom, life, and sex in the form of a classic Gothic vampire tale.

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Everything Is Tuberculosis

I remember getting TB tests in elementary school and, as I wanted to be a writer, believing I would eventually suffer  from “consumption” as I insisted on calling it - as some of my favorite writers had, with no real thought to how terrible the disease actually is - nor how widespread and both simple and difficult to treat/cure.

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The Eyes Are the Best Part

I liked a lot about the characters and the story, but it felt unnecessarily challenging to read with all the dream sequences being difficult to distinguish- and sooo many of them.

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Nowhere

Nowhere has the hallmarks of an effective horror tale, creepy children, dark forests, small town, and folklore.

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Warrior Girl Unearthed

Besides a return to characters I enjoyed from The Firekeeper’s Daughter (10 years later and from the perspective of her now/teenage niece), the sequel Warrior Girl Unearthed was as filled with mystery, family, native lore, and attention to social justice as its predecessor. 

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Firekeeper’s Daughter

This is a great example of the danger of reducing a book to tropes. If you had pitched a YA, fake dating, hockey romance to me, it would be a hard pass.

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The Map of Lost Places

I was really excited for this anthology and its theme of lost, liminal spaces. I also appreciated the mix of well-known and unknown authors.

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When the Wolf Comes Home

This is the kind of audiobook that I take issue with because it sets such a high bar for audiobooks that I have trouble listening to other productions.

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Wake Up and Open Your Eyes

[Wake Up and Open Your Eyes] perfectly matched my dark Gen-X sense of humor and as a satire of our literal current existence is spot-on. I have never felt a sentence more in recent years than, “Seems like a strange time to be out for some exercise, what with the world ending” because everything every day feels like that.

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The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store

The initial description I saw of The Heaven and Earth Grocery Store is that it is a murder mystery - a genre that done well has me speed-reading to get to the solution - but in this case, the characters, their lives, and their relationships to each other were so rich and drew me in so much, I forgot that I was waiting to identify a body (though the payoff was worthy of a Coen brothers film). 

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Withered Hill

Withered Hill is a folk horror novel that provides an intriguing answer to the question, Can people change? 

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Their Monstrous Hearts

The dual timeline is still a relatively interesting approach, and overall the story was well-paced, but at times, it felt bloated, like a student using a thesaurus to pad the word count so they didn’t get marked down on an assignment.

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Murder by Cheesecake

If you can read this without hearing the voices of their television counterparts, I can only assume you’ve never seen the Golden Girls.

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The Only Good Indians

It is not every writer than can make me literally hold my breath during a game of 1:1 pick-up basketball, but Jones achieved this is one of the final scenes.

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Murder Ballads

Filled with background on some of the most popular murder ballads, including potential historical inspirations and different versions and accompanied by Horan’s gorgeous folk horror illustrations, Murder Ballads is a must-have for any fan of this song style (or music history or folk horror in general).

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