Book Reviews

I read books and say things about them.

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The Library at Hellebore

The Library at Hellebore is like what would happen if you populated Brakebills (“The Magicians”) with gods and monsters then held a battle royale.

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Spider to the Fly

J. H. Markert’s Spider to the Fly stressed me out in the best way, though I had to remind myself to breathe for about the last quarter of it.

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Come Knocking

Like his earlier novel, Come Knocking draws the reader in by appealing to that nature within us that makes us marvel at tragedy while challenging us to empathize with instigators and victims alike.

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Secret Lives of the Dead

Secret Lives of the Dead is an effectively creepy folk horror from Tim Lebbon that centers around a family cursed by a witch and a woman whose life was forever changed as a teenager by the man who has spent his life trying to break that curse.

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The Unraveling of Julia

The Unraveling of Julia by Lisa Scottoline had everything I look for in an engaging gothic thriller - a relatable heroine, a mystery, romance, a surprise inheritance, and, as a bonus, a touch of the supernatural.

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The Unseen

The Unseen is a story of loss - loss of unborn children, loss of family, loss of control - in the trappings of a creepy-kid horror story told from the perspectives of the family of seven whose lives are disrupted by the appearance of an apparently abandoned child at their home.

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The No-End House

The No-End House is a haunted house escape room whose challenges are created using deepest fears from the players’ sub-consciences.

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Smile for the Cameras

Miranda Smith is obviously a horror fan writing for other horror fans, who will delight in identifying references to their favorite films like Evil Dead and Scream.

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The World Turns Red

Tim Waggoner’s description of the meat room is visceral and, as Lewis (and we) recognize it and the Unhigh for what they are - gut wrenching.  

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Girl in the Creek

Put Mira Grant’s science in T. Kingfisher’s fantasy folk horror, and you’ll get something that approximates Wendy Wagner’s Girl in the Creek, which follows Erin who finagles a work trip to a forest in the Pacific Northwest so she can look for her missing brother.

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Glass Girls

Glass Girls is an effectively scary ghost story, as Alice (and later her niece) are haunted by earth-bound spirits by virtue of their innate powers as mediums.

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Ten Sleep

Ten Sleep has everything I want in a weird west novel and some things I didn’t even know I wanted - part folklore, part body horror, part personal and interpersonal demons, and part Watership Down.

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Yours Cruelly, Elvira

Part Hollywood tell-all, part rags to riches story, Cassandra appeared not to pull any punches in naming names or sharing painful memories from her life. 

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It Was Her House FIrst

It Was Her House First was a thrilling haunted house story that was hard to put down. Cherie Priest’s style is casual and makes for an easy read, but full of all the dread and emotion I look for in a ghost tale.

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Orbital

Reading Orbital was like reading a long poem about the vastness and smallness of Earth - in part through the eyes of four astronauts and two cosmonauts as they experience a sunrise every 90 minutes in their space station orbiting the planet.

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Blood on Her Tongue

Johanna van Veen has become a must-read author for me. Blood on Her Tongue has all the hallmarks of a gothic novel (twin sisters, mysterious illnesses, atmospheric castles) with 100% more body horror and a dash of spice.

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How to Survive a Horror Story

Horror authors are invited to the creepy estate of recently deceased Mortimer Queen - Arnold’s fictional stand-in for a Stephen King-like icon in How to Survive a Horror Story - for the reading of his will - and a game whose prize for the last author standing is the manor - and their life.

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