Book Review: This Wretched Valley by Jenny Kiefer

Take only pictures. Leave only bones.

PLOT SUMMARY:

This trip is going to be Dylan’s big break. Her geologist friend Clay has discovered an untouched cliff face in the Kentucky wilderness, and she is going to be the first person to climb it. Together with Clay, his research assistant Sylvia, and Dylan’s boyfriend Luke, Dylan is going to document her achievement on Instagram and finally cement her place as the next rising star in rock climbing.

Seven months later, three bodies are discovered in the trees just off the highway. All are in various states of decay: one a stark, white skeleton; the second emptied of its organs; and the third a mutilated corpse with the tongue, eyes, ears, and fingers removed.

But Dylan is still missing—and no trace of her, dead or alive, has been discovered.

Were the climbers murdered? Did they succumb to cannibalism? Or are their impossible bodies the work of an even more sinister force? 

This dread-inducing debut builds to a bloodcurdling climax, and will leave you shocked by the final twist.

GRADE: B+

REVIEW:

This book was inspired by the Dyatlov Pass which I’ve always been fascinated by (if you don’t know what that is, Google it and go down a rabbit hole that will keep you busy for hours). I breezed through the beginning portion of this novel, as I find rock climbing (and mountain climbing) very fascinating (probably because I don’t partake in it so I can live vicariously through characters who do!). The moment the four friends arrive at the valley, strange things begin to happen. I find forests pretty intimidating and scary so the setting was definitely creepy for me and I enjoyed that. I loved the history behind the forest and what occurred before the friends arrived there (that we got to learn later on in the book). There are many scary moments in this novel that horror fans will absolutely love. The only snag I had was that towards the middle mark the novel became a little repetitive when the friends kept going around in circles in the woods (and that’s probably the point) but for a debut, this was a strong novel. Not to mention that I haven’t read too many books that have a sentient forest ready to unleash its fury upon those who dare trespass on it.

Horror fans (especially those who love gore) will love this novel. I think it’d make an excellent movie too!

*Thank you so much to NetGalley and Quirk Books for the digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

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Silk by L.E. Daniels

2010

The Carriage House Home for Aged Women

Spectacle Cove, Rhode Island

Memory is a bloody thing when you’ve lived snarled with secrets too long. As you watch the light change before sunset from your bed, everything you willed to forget gathers to dissect you to the bone.

A dull headache looms, your mouth cottons, and the stool softeners worm their way around your guts. Still, before it grows dark, you think fondly of a son who doesn’t visit much but pays for a bed beside the window, where the bay shines gold. It gives you something to look at besides yourself and you watch the shifting sea as if through a telescope from the moon.

With hearing aids out of reach on the bedside table, the low pulse of what’s left of your hearing is punctuated by distant screams and your heart responds with an arrhythmic shudder. Your fellow residents are howling. Sundowners. Their psychotic episodes plume as the sunlight fades.

Like them, you’re receding from this life piece by piece, but one thing tethers you to this bed. One thing anchors you here—more than the husband you didn’t know how to live with, then learned to live without more than sixty years ago; more than the guilt of being a less than willing mother and a disinterested son to prove it; more than spending a lifetime on factory floors envious of anyone with a high school diploma; and more than all the family you buried, whether you were speaking to them or not—none of whom, by the way, have stepped through the ether to show you the way home, if the stories from hospice nurse are even true.

It’s just you.

And every day is the same; waiting for the pain medication to send you to sleep and hope, this time, it’s for good.

You startle. A swift, dark shape shoots past your window. The painful jolt jostles your spine.

Even with dimming eyes, you know it was a barn swallow barreling into the eaves, and you swear you can hear the rattle of it roosting for the night. The tap, tap, tap of a beak and tiny, scratching feet.

Like the shadows now spreading on a dark purple bay, something calls to you—a thick, viscous groan, forcing you to remember the sacrifices you made, one by one, to the endless dark.

* * *

In 1915, you were five. You spent the summer sitting at your mother’s side within the great thrumming aisles of the Kimball Silk Mill of South Kingston, coaxing pale filaments from wet cocoons after the caterpillars were boiled alive.

Nearly bumped off yourself by polio, you spent the summer at the mill as you recovered from surgery—the doctors had snipped portions of your Achilles’ tendons in an attempt to flatten your feet. They were warped by the neurological damage of the virus, but the procedure didn’t work. You still toe-walked alongside your mother—in your big sister’s castoff boots with newspaper stuffed into the gaps under your heels—and you defied the doctor’s prognosis that you’d never walk again.

“You did all those yourself?” Mr. Ross patted your head and puffed on a cigarette. “Kid, you’re fast! You can stay on the job as long as you like!”

“She’s going to school in September,” your mother said, her voice lilting with the Italian accent she always tried to dispel, “with her brothers and sister.”

“Pity.” He continued toward his office above the factory floor. “We’ll miss ya, kid.”

He disappeared up the steps to his office as you determined to work even faster. The more cocoons you unfurled without breaking the thread, the more money your mother took home.

You were the smallest of four and your father said that of all of his children, you were the fiercest. You attended school and learned to read, but after a few fistfights in the schoolyard with kids who made fun of your limp, you were back in the mill by ten, standing in Mr. Ross’s office with the weight of your mother’s gaze upon you.

The noise from the factory floor swelled around the room until he rushed in and closed the door. The thin plywood provided some relief from the racket below and you exhaled, until the phone on his desk rattled and startled you.

“One second.” He lifted the mouthpiece and placed the receiver to his ear. “Uh-huh. Yep, get the ladder, Billy. Yep.”

The family needed the money and you weren’t cut out for the books like your sister. Your parents’ jobs and the tailoring your mother took in wasn’t enough. Your two oldest brothers had joined the Navy and hadn’t sent home any pay yet. Your sister needed tuition for secretarial school. She gave you the hand-me-down dress, handstitched by your mother, and it hung from you, boxy and itchy.

“They grow up fast, don’t they?” He replaced the receiver, straightened his navy-blue silk tie with a gold paisley print into his vest and sat behind his desk. He motioned for your mother to take the other chair.

When he asked your age, you looked him right in the eye and lied easily. “I’m twelve and I’m fast. You know I’m fast.” You stood as tall as you could and frowned like the faces you’d seen on your way in.

His smiled, softening the sharp angles of his face. “Good. That’s just what we need. What about the polio?” He pointed to your oversized boots. “You get around OK?”

“What polio?” You shot a look at your mother. She winced but you continued. “I ran up those stairs so quick you didn’t even see me do it, did you?”

He laughed as he handed your mother a paper and she folded it away into her purse, for you to read to her later.

You stole a glance from his wide office window that looked out upon the workers buzzing away on the expansive floor, the machinery spinning. You saw Billy, his floorman, expertly weaving through the aisles, a wooden ladder under one arm.

Fast. Like everyone down there.

Like you.

* * *

You joined the night shift with your mother, ensuring silk threads never broke, feeding rows upon rows of spools that never stopped twirling in their hunger for more. Your mother ran a line of looms through the night while you clopped along the wooden floor in your boots.

A few months into your job, when the moon shined dusty and fat through the long factory windows, you were replacing full spools of silk with empty ones when a peculiar movement in the rafters caught your eye. You paused at your cart. A little bird twitched in the beams above the clattering machinery. It was panting, revealing a mouth the color of marigold.

You realized that if that bird pooped into the silk, you didn’t know how much would be docked from your pay. It fidgeted on the beam, and you saw from its dark points and tawny breast that it was a swallow.

You pushed your cart against a brick pillar and opened windows against the moon-soaked night. When the sweeper kid circled a row of machines, trying to look busy with his broom, you signaled him.

“Hey, Nicky,” you shouted over the din, “get a ladder.”

You held the ladder steady against a pillar while Nick climbed, fluff and lint stuck all over his woolen short pants, his rump in your face. You passed his broom up to his waiting hand.

Nick swung at the bird, hitting it harder than you’d hoped.

It fell, stiff with terror—black, shiny button eyes flashing as it tumbled into the web of wriggling threads, tangled into taut wires of silk, little wings twisting asunder. The spools spun, twirling and whirling and the bird rolled, ugly in its writhing and threatening to pop several threads of silk all at once.

Swiftly, you left the ladder and reached into the shivering threads for the bird. You turned just in time to see Nick fall hard against the wooden slats of the mill floor, the ladder crashing on top of him. You withdrew your hand.

Cradling his head, Nick revealed bright red fingertips as blood oozed and dripped on the floorboards. When he stumbled to his feet, he left a crimson smear where he’d fallen.

Billy, the floorman appeared out of nowhere, and caught Nick as he staggered.

“You two palookas.” Billy shook Nick by a shoulder. “What’s this?”

“A bird.” You reached into the threads again, your heart pounding.

Nick looked like he was fighting off tears. Billy touched his head and sent him home.

The row of machinery paused for a whole sixty seconds. The stillness around you was like a church, even though the other rows still hummed. You parted the threads to tease the broken bird free so it could die in your hands.

When the machinery heaved into action again, a hiss filled the air and you were terrified the floorman would blame you, but he didn’t. He just pointed to the mess in your hands and said, “Don’t take it home an’ eat it. I know what you guineas are like. Clean up the floor.”

Billy walked away from you, taking the ladder with him until he paused to talk to pretty Edie in the next aisle.

The bird in your hand was soft and warm and Nick’s blood on the floor shone bright red. You bent to look closer. It was swirling, like it was cascading down a drain. The wooden floor hadn’t seen a lick of oil in ages and it was pulling the blood right down into its pith. Peering closer, you felt something heave, like a ripple in the air or the across walls, you weren’t sure, but when you looked up, the machines whirred faster and spun cleanly, without any evidence of the disaster.

You pocketed the bird and wheeled your cart along the row and the spools spun so fast, you had to replace them all before you could clean the floor.

By the time you returned with a bucket and brush, the bloodstains were gone. You stood there in disbelief, wondering if you had the right aisle, but you did; and the end of your shift, you counted sixty spools over the usual output, all feeding into the looms in your mother’s section.

When you punched the time clock, you didn’t tell your mother about Nick—who you never saw again—or the bird.

The bird. You pushed your hand in your pocket and found that it had bled through the fabric of your dress. You threw it into the shrubs by the factory doors and it didn’t make a sound as it slipped through the branches into the darkness.

* * *

A few months later, when the moon hung orange and low, things went tail up for pretty Edie too.

Since your first shift, you stole looks at Edie through the machinery and shuddering lengths of silk threads and you saw how she flirted with Billy. She had moxie. And now she had a little, gold bracelet that flashed from the crimp of her shirt sleeve. Your mother told you that girls did bad things to get gold bracelets, so you never wanted one, but still, you felt your cheeks burn every time she caught you staring.

Edie said she was sixteen but maybe she was a tall fourteen. She had long, chestnut hair and she wore it all pinned up in a big floppy bow she made herself from fabric offcuts. You asked her to make you one and even stole some offcuts from your mother’s sewing basket, but she never did. She kept your offcuts though.

Unlike everyone else, she also left her station to drift past Billy and saunter into the washroom. Billy let her go when he never let anyone else go during their shifts, not even your mother.

But that night, with the moon fleshy and full in the window, Edie came back from the washroom with her hair askew and her nose red.

When you asked what happened, she pushed you away.

“Get lost, gimpy,” she sneered from behind the hair which had fallen from her bow.

As she retreated back to her section, you saw the tear in her skirt, right at the side-seam, and she wasn’t walking right. The grace in her gait that you envied was gone. But she was still pretty.

You were never pretty—your whole family told you that. Your older sister got the looks and the brains; your brothers were tall and handsome and charming.

What did you have? A broken nose from your father for lying about stealing your mother’s offcuts and a job at the mill.

The moon was gone and the light was lifting outside, and when you were counting your spools, Edie came up real close and said, “Can you help me?”

“Get lost, chippy.” You spat a word your mother used for girls of ill repute, and suddenly wished she would die. “Enjoy your breaks while the rest of us are cramping up.”

Even from the corner of your eye, you saw her slump, but you ignored it and your heart skipped at your courage to reject her.

You emptied your cart and looked up just in time to see Edie climb a ladder and step onto the ledge of the pale, third-story window. She hugged her body close to the pane in the early morning light, then dove head-first with terrible force.

You held your breath as you ran to the glass and saw her crumpled and twitching on the gravel road below. Face down, her head was crammed between her shoulders, and her body was all twisted up like that bird. The gravel bloomed in the shadows beneath the folds of her skirt and began to swirl, black and shiny like oil.

You swooned and clung to the sill, and the bricks that framed your view inhaled. The road rippled like a skirt around the mill and the whole building quaked. You felt it. You know you did. And when you looked down at your hands clutching the windowsill, Edie’s gold bracelet sat coiled between them. You pocketed it.

Beside you, Billy gripped your shoulder and you gasped. You thought he saw you take the bracelet, but he just stared out the window, down at the ground. He coughed raggedly and clutched at his chest and said, “Oh Christ! Oh Christ!”

When the machines groaned louder now, Billy looked at you searching; his mouth gaped as he swept his gaze across the rolling factory floor. The machines wailed hot like a mammoth pipe organ at church, and that’s when you knew what was happening. The lights surged overhead, the floor rocked, and a mist of silk dust rose from the speed of the spinning spools. Somehow, the mill drank Edie into it and churned her into silk.

You broke from Billy and stumbled as you rushed to thread and rethread like there were three of you on the job. Your feet tripped you up and you fell and split your chin, but you only redoubled your effort.

At the close of your shift, you counted and saw that production had doubled. There were more silk spools than the looms could manage and you boxed them. You volunteered for another shift to cover for Edie, you told your mother.

Mr. Ross came in with the police that morning. He looked at you grimly and thanked you for your dedication at this time of need. Your mother squeezed your arm hard and begged to take you home, but you refused.

“Let her work,” Mr. Ross said. “It’s better to stay busy.”

Your mother told you she was worried about you before she went home, but Mr. Ross doubled your pay.

* * *

You knew your mother wasn’t well as she leaned over her loom. You were seventeen and didn’t miss a thing. She was pregnant and throwing up again, and then she wasn’t.

Over the years, you watched her do things to her body with the same lye she used to make soap for the family. At home, you saw her stagger toward the outhouse and groan, sometimes dropping to her knees before she got there, and you always helped her. That night under a glittering moon as snow fell in dry, miserly flakes outside, you followed the urge to check on your mother, and it was clear, even in the jaundiced light, that the flesh around her mouth cast a green hue while the rest of her face was white as paste.

Your mother had bled through her clothes, oblivious to the red sheen that ran down the leg of her stool and seeped into the thirsty cracks of the floorboards. A white-hot rage boiled inside of you at the sight, at your father’s recklessness, at Billy’s stupidity, and even at Mr. Ross strolling past his office window—but you let nothing show.

You leaned in close and motioned for her to follow you.

She half stood, half crouched, pained in a way you’d never seen before.

“I got it, Ma.” You wrapped your cardigan around her waist and escorted her to the washroom. You glared at Billy and he averted his eyes, as he’d always done since Edie.

“Take your time,” you told her and left her there. You tucked her soiled underclothes under your arm and rode the automatic elevator until it released you to the basement.

Bare bulbs lit the unfinished portion of the cellar that housed an industrial incinerator, and in the lowest corner, past the ridges of the abandoned bricks, concrete rubble, and rotten footings that gave way to damp, bare soil, a gaping hole in the ground smelled like a brackish well.

By now, you’d fed it so many things: Edie’s gold bracelet, handfuls of live silkworms, mice. Even a few stray cats who’d been dazzled by the headlamps of Mr. Ross’s swerving automobile. You’d thrown in hessian sacks of unwanted puppies or a stolen piglet whenever machinery failures had you worried for your job. And it worked. Every time. The results were in the numbers, in the airy softness of the silk, and sometimes the way the colors “simply popped” as Mr. Ross put it.

Worst of all, you threw in every single one of the sad little birds your mother couldn’t bear to touch after her body had expelled them. Wrapped in offcut material, you cast them in, and they sailed into blackness, absorbed as the lights around you surged. The very foundation shook as the cardinal red or royal blue nearly levitated from gloved hands on the factory floor.

And Mr. Ross bought a new black Pierce-Arrow convertible and continued to expand his mill. He had so many different silk ties, he gave them away and never wore the same one twice.

* * *

The stock market crashed in October 1929—you were nineteen.

Only a few weeks before, Mr. Ross promoted you to floor-girl at Kimball Silk Mill, the first one ever, and you didn’t get a gold bracelet doing it.

You knew every inch of the mill and how Mr. Ross built it on swampland that no one wanted, which explained the big drainage ditch in the cellar. Mr. Ross also told you that there was a massacre, The Great Swamp Fight, between the colonials and the Narragansett people on this land and you wondered to yourself if all that bloodletting is what bewitched the place.

This was also the year your mother died. Cancer bloomed from all the lye she put in her body and your father grieved by working overtime and finding a girlfriend he thought was a secret. You practically lived at the mill and Billy did whatever you said.

Mr. Ross had called you to his office, a newspaper sprawled before him, pinned by a glass of whiskey. PANIC was the only newsprint word you read.

“You’re family,” he told the wall. “You’ve always been family.”

And you thought about your family. How your brothers never came back for more than an afternoon. How your sister got that secretarial job and left for Manhattan.

You wondered what your mother got.

Your father.

What you got.

You looked down at the smart top and skirt you earned, at the shoes on your feet. You could buy heels now that disguised your deformity: two-inch military heels with a patent-trimmed strap called the Savoy. You never wore hand-me-downs again.

“And this family’s in trouble.” His eyes were sunken, bloodshot, and you smelled the booze. “We’re in the red and we gotta get out of it.”

“People always want silk,” you said. “Even if they can afford nothing else, they’ll buy a little square of silk.”

“They need to buy more than that. We need something special to make sure of it. You’ve never been with a boy, have you?”

“What? No!”

“You should know, Billy didn’t hurt Edie. He knew what she was worth to me.”

“You know he hurt her. Why else did she—” You can’t say the rest.

“No, you’ve never been with a boy. There’s a dozen ways to enjoy a girl while keeping her intact. And Billy was a pervert.”

Mr. Ross said was. You looked out the big window, past the idle workers huddled in groups, past the silent machinery that had ground to a halt at the news of the market crash, past the brick pillars to the open grate of the automatic elevator. You realized then that you hadn’t seen Billy all night.

When you looked back at Mr. Ross, you understood. He knew all about his mill’s appetites. And you were pretty sure he knew you did too.

“I want to show you something.” He stood abruptly and tugged the handrail on the way down the steps from his office. The workers watched you, eyes black with fear.

Mr. Ross held the elevator open for you and took you down.

“You know what I told you about this place, how I could never fill this hole,” he motioned. “It ate everything we put in there. Backfill. Bricks. Concrete. It’s insatiable.”

His hands shook while he spoke. You hung back, lingering near the incinerator.

“You wouldn’t believe what I threw down there last night. Come. Have a look.”

You shook your head.

“Just c’mere.”

You inched closer.

In a sudden burst, he tackled you. You felt the sharpness of his bones and lean muscle. He clapped a hand over your mouth and dragged you forward as you flailed until, with a great heave, he threw you into the hole.

The world went light-dark, light-dark, and you tried to catch your hands on something and felt the skin of your fingers spilt.

You spun and when you bumped your head, you thought you heard a fragment of a song—your mother singing in Italian, like she did when you were sick with polio, before your father made her use only English because you were Americans now.

You slid and heard babies crying or were they puppies? And you thought you saw a spray of birds chirping in the black air around you as you reached through them to grab a hold of something and stop sliding into darkness.

The light of the cellar was still up there, and you stood on something that crunched like old bones. You rubbed your head but everything was numb. You smelled your fingers, but it wasn’t blood. It was the oily brine and sour decay of the hole itself. You wiped your hands on your skirt. Something glinted on a stone, and you grabbed it. Edie’s bracelet.

You climbed toward a ledge just as a thick hand grabbed your wrist and pulled you up. Your eyes adjusted. Billy.

He groaned as he leaned back, prone on a narrow ledge. “I can’t stop bleeding.”

A dark shape protruded from his chest. His fingers tap, tap, tapped on the stony ledge around him, his nails scratching.

“You gotta get out,” Billy whispered, lifting his chin toward another small ledge above him. “There.”

He reached for you, and you scrambled over his chest onto the ledge. He slid on his back and pushed you up with his feet with a grunt that turned phlegmy until he fell silent.

Quietly now, you climbed against stones and old root systems puffed up like varicose veins.

You smelled Mr. Ross’s cigarette, and crept closer to the mouth of the hole, toward the gauzy light of bare lightbulbs. You heard Mr. Ross weeping and cursing and lighting another cigarette, the matchhead smoked as it flicked past your face. His back was turned to you as you peered from the hole.

Surprising him was your gift—it had always been your gift—and you clawed your way up his trouser leg like a cat. He kicked at you but he slipped and hit the ground. You struck his nose with your elbow.

As you climbed over him, you hammered him with your two-inch spike heels, suddenly thrilled by the way they gave you purchase, his body a ladder until you pushed off from his shoulders and leapt from the hole. You heard a sharp crack of bone as he collided with Billy below.

* * *

And now, back in your bed, all you hear is that screaming again—the sundowners. It’s close and suffocating and you squeeze your eyelids tight and wish those bastards would shut the hell up for just one night.

You kick against the blankets and hit out with your bony fists, but you feel restraints on your wrists and when you open your eyes, you understand. As the light fades outside the window, reason dawns.

It’s you.

It’s always been you.

You and the mill.

And that hideous ground that marked you with its brine.

It’s searching for you always, you—the one that stole away.

The stench of sour decay winds through your nose and mouth and the bed itself writhes with roots that stretch over your legs and pull you in. The clatter and groan of the machines fill your ears, silk dust shimmers inside your eyelids, and worms twitch and drown again and again inside the eggshell of your skull and your congested lungs. When you open your mouth, reams of silk spill out across your bedclothes, all black now, just shining, oily black.

It’s always been you, thrashing as the last breath of sunset rolls across the bay and sinks, leaving you alone, dreadfully alone again in the dark with everything you thought you’d cast away.

“Silk” can be found in Hush, Don’t Wake the Monster Stories Inspired by Stephen King Women in Horror Anthology

Book Review: The Angel of Indian Lake by Stephen Graham Jones

I flinch, sure a hatchet is about to come spinning out of the darkness, sure a scythe is swinging our way.”

PLOT SUMMARY:

It’s been four years in prison since Jade Daniels last saw her hometown of Proofrock, Idaho, the day she took the fall, protecting her friend Letha and her family from incrimination. Since then, her reputation, and the town, have changed dramatically. There’s a lot of unfinished business in Proofrock, from serial killer cultists to the rich trying to buy Western authenticity. But there’s one aspect of Proofrock no one wants to confront…until Jade comes back to town. The curse of the Lake Witch is waiting, and now is the time for the final stand.

GRADE: A+

REVIEW:

I had no doubts that I was going to love this third installment from the Indian Lake trilogy. I loved every moment of this bloody, gory, action-packed novel. Jade Daniels is back and out of prison, and is currently the history teacher in her former high school. Everything seems alright, until the first bodies are found and then Jade must figure out if she’s back in a slasher again, trying to recall all the rules for the third sequel. What this means is that the killer is going to be superhuman, anyone can die, including the the main character, and the past will come to haunt you. Our protagonist has to deal with all those things during the duration of the novel, and at times the reader can’t help but doubt if maybe Jade could somehow be behind the murders this time. This novel kept me on the tip of my toes, and every few pages I couldn’t help but mutter, “Oh f**k.” This novel isn’t for the faint of heart – and it will surely have you teary eyed several times, but I trusted Jones to give us the ending this trilogy deserved and he delivered tenfold. If you haven’t read this series, I urge you to read My Heart is a Chainsaw, especially if you’re a fan of slasher films and horror film history. Obviously, if you have read the previous books from this series, then reading this final installment is a MUST. I absolutely loved this book and the whole trilogy and wasn’t ready to say goodbye to Jade, my only hope is that someone picks this up to become a miniseries in the future.

*Thank you so much to NetGalley and Saga Press for the digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

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Giveaway Alert: Signed Copy of I Want Candy

From now till Feb. 1, I will be running a giveaway where one winner will win a signed copy of I WANT CANDY, a personalized Valentine’s Day card, and of course – candy!

You can enter in two different ways – hop on over to my Instagram or you can use Rafflecopter . Please note this is open ONLY to U.S. Residents!

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Book Review: The Haunting Of Velkwood by Gwendolyn Kiste

You’re not a very nice girl, are you?

PLOT SUMMARY:

The Velkwood Vicinity was the topic of occult theorists, tabloid one-hour documentaries, and even some pseudo-scientific investigations as the block of homes disappeared behind a near-impenetrable veil that only three survivors could enter—and only one has in the past twenty years, until now.

Talitha Velkwood has avoided anything to do with the tragedy that took her mother and eight-year-old sister, drifting from one job to another, never settling anywhere or with anyone, feeling as trapped by her past as if she was still there in the small town she so desperately wanted to escape from. When a new researcher tracks her down and offers to pay her to come back to enter the vicinity, Talitha claims she’s just doing it for the money. Of all the crackpot theories over the years, no one has discovered what happened the night Talitha, her estranged, former best friend Brett, and Grace, escaped their homes twenty years ago. Will she finally get the answers she’s been looking for all these years, or is this just another dead end?

GRADE: A+

REVIEW:

I absolutely loved this novel. Usually, reading about hauntings isn’t my thing because books with ghosts tend to be so tropey- however, Kiste’s novel is so intriguing and fresh that it takes haunting to a whole new level. A whole neighborhood disappears with the people that lived there and no one can enter it except for the three friends that used to live there and are the only survivors. I love the idea of childhood friends that return to their original home to try to understand what exactly happened twenty years ago. I love the dynamic that Talitha and Brett had, you couldn’t help but root for these childhood friends that realized years ago that maybe their feelings verged more than friendship but in the world they lived in, their love couldn’t ever be front and center. This is a character driven novel, but the lush, Gothic atmosphere will completely seduce you too. I couldn’t put this book down and read it in two days! That’s to say that I was completely mesmerized by the story and just wanted to bask in it, and I loved that it had The Virgin Suicides vibes but being told from the female perspective instead of the male gaze.

I recommend this book if you love hauntings, ghosts, Gothic feels, queer characters, and mystery soaked in suspense.

*Thank you so much to NetGalley and Saga Press for the digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

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Book Review: The Folly by Gemma Amor

When Dad had been sentenced, I had been orphaned, practically and emotionally, at a much younger age than I had anticipated being parentless. I had been thrust into a new phase of life, a lonely phase, an unguided phase, which was both terrifying and oddly liberating.”

PLOT SUMMARY:

Morgan always knew her father, Owen, never murdered her mother, and has spent the last six years campaigning for his release from prison. Finally he is set free, but they can no longer live in the house that was last decorated by her mother’s blood. Salvation comes in the form of a tall, dark and notorious decorative granite tower on the Cornish coastline known only as ‘The Folly’. The owner makes them an offer: take care of the Folly, and you can live there. It’s an offer too good to refuse.

At first the Folly is idyllic, but soon a stranger arrives who acts like Morgan’s mother, talks like her mother, and wears her dead mother’s clothes. Is this stranger hell-bent on vengeance, in touch with her restless mother’s spirit itself, or simply just deranged? And, most importantly, what exactly happened the night Morgan’s mother died?

GRADE: A

REVIEW:

I usually enjoy Amor’s books, and this was no exception. I got invested really fast to the daughter/father relationship, especially since it explored a strained relationship caused by the father having been in jail for the murder of her mother for many years. However, Morgan never believed he was at fault. But once they begin to live at The Folly – a residence near a coastal town, strange things begin to happen. Morgan can’t figure out if her mother is trying to contact her through the possession of a stranger, or if the stranger is simply trying to mess with them. Family secrets left buried come to the surface and it changes everything. I liked this take on possession and I personally love it when someone can make a perfectly “happy-sounding” song creepy such as in the case of Abba’s Waterloo.

This was a fast read (because of impeccable pacing and short nature) so if you’re looking for a novella that explores father/daughter relationships, the meaning of family, grief, and a new take on possession then I recommend you pick this up as it’ll be the perfect read for you!

*Thank you so much to the author for the digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

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Book Review: Diavola by Jennifer Thorne

Anna has two rules for the annual Pace family destination vacations: Tread lightly and survive.

PLOT SUMMARY:

It isn’t easy when she’s the only one in the family who doesn’t quite fit in. Her twin brother, Benny, goes with the flow so much he’s practically dissolved, and her older sister, Nicole, is so used to everyone―including her blandly docile husband and two kids―falling in line that Anna often ends up in trouble for simply asking a question. Mom seizes every opportunity to question her life choices, and Dad, when not reminding everyone who paid for this vacation, just wants some peace and quiet.

The gorgeous, remote villa in tiny Monteperso seems like a perfect place to endure so much family togetherness, until things start going off the rails―the strange noises at night, the unsettling warnings from the local villagers, and the dark, violent past of the villa itself.

GRADE: C-

REVIEW:

This book had a thrilling premise, a haunted villa in Tuscany and being trapped with family members who dislike you. That already sounded like a horror story ready to happen. I didn’t mind the first 20% of this book, but being Italian, there were many inaccuracies that I couldn’t overlook. I didn’t mind when Anna, the American protagonist spoke Italian like Google Translate, however, when the author had a two hundred year Florentine ghost speak Italian in the same way, I simply couldn’t stay focused on the story. Not to mention that the author doesn’t realize that Italy is culturally vastly different between the northern and southern regions. What this means is that there’s no way someone in Florence is using cornicelli amulets to ward off the evil eye when that is a very Southern Italian superstition that you won’t see past Rome. Not to mention that I disliked most of the characters in this book, including the protagonist (what annoyed me about her is that she returns to New York with the ghost following her home and she doesn’t act scared shitless as any normal person would be, but rather is cracking jokes at it). I really couldn’t enjoy this book for all of those reasons, and maybe if you’re not Italian, you won’t pick up all the inaccuracies that I did and might like this better, but for me, this was a complete pass. The author can write, but clearly, she or Tor Nightfire were sleeping at the wheel when it came to backing up her research.

*Thank you so much to NetGalley and Tor Nightfire for the digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

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Book Review: Nestlings by Nat Cassidy

There’s no place like home.

PLOT SUMMARY:

Ana and Reid need a break. The horrifically complicated birth of their first child has left Ana paralyzed, bitter, and struggling―with mobility, with her relationship with Reid, with resentment for her baby. Reid dismisses disturbing events and Ana’s deep unease and paranoia, but he can’t explain the needle-like bite marks on their baby.

GRADE: B+

REVIEW:

Right off the bat, you get Rosemary’s Baby vibes from the very first chapter – but if you have read Riley Sager’s Lock Every Door, then you’ll also feel like the gargoyles are vaguely familiar (although here they have a bigger role).

Ana and Reid with their baby Charlie, win some kind of apartment lottery and happen to get one at one of the most luxurious buildings in Manhattan – however there’s a catch 22, as the building is rumored to have brought upon much bad luck to the tenants that live there. The building is wrapped in mystery as not many books are written about it, safe for one that Reid finds in a used book store that he quickly becomes obsessed with.

The novel is gripping, chilling, and with a very unexpected ending (although I do love that Cassidy went down the route he did). Nestlings captures you with a claustrophobic clutch and doesn’t let go until you reach the very end. My only tiny gripe with the novel is that between the major reveal and the end, it kinda began to move slower, but I kept on reading because I wanted to know how it would end for these characters.

This a must-read if you love creepy horror, verging on the terrifying. The images are really dark, and at times downright sickening – which I loved, so if you’re into that sort of horror you will love this too.

*Thank you so much to NetGalley and Tor Nightfire for the digital copy of this book in exchange for an honest review!

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3 Thanksgiving Horror Movies to Watch on Thanksgiving!

If spending time with your family begins to feel like a drag, then suggest a movie to watch and have everyone settle down to a terrifying horror movie that takes place during Thanksgiving cause sometimes the holidays are just downright scary!

KRISTY (2014)

Violent thugs terrorize a young woman (Haley Bennett) who’s alone on a college campus for Thanksgiving weekend. Ashley Greene plays a chilling pierced villain. Think “Home Alone” but with a lot more violence and gore.

PILGRIM (2019)

A woman invites Pilgrim reenactors to her family’s Thanksgiving celebration in an effort to remind them of their privilege and help them bond with one another.

THANKSGIVING (2023)

For many years this was only a fake trailer shown in Quentin Tarantino’s and Robert Rodriguez’s 2007 double feature, Grindhouse. Finally, sixteen years later we get an actual movie by Eli Roth inspired by that trailer. An axe-wielding maniac terrorizes residents of Plymouth, Mass., after a Black Friday riot ends in tragedy. Picking off victims one by one, the seemingly random revenge killings soon become part of a larger, sinister plan.

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3 Witchy Novels to Read During Halloween

THE YEAR OF THE WITCHING BY ALEXIS HENDERSON

In the lands of Bethel, where the Prophet’s word is law, Immanuelle Moore’s very existence is blasphemy. Her mother’s union with an outsider of a different race cast her once-proud family into disgrace, so Immanuelle does her best to worship the Father, follow Holy Protocol, and lead a life of submission, devotion, and absolute conformity, like all the other women in the settlement.

But a mishap lures her into the forbidden Darkwood surrounding Bethel, where the first prophet once chased and killed four powerful witches. Their spirits are still lurking there, and they bestow a gift on Immanuelle: the journal of her dead mother, who Immanuelle is shocked to learn once sought sanctuary in the wood.

Fascinated by the secrets in the diary, Immanuelle finds herself struggling to understand how her mother could have consorted with the witches. But when she begins to learn grim truths about the Church and its history, she realizes the true threat to Bethel is its own darkness. And she starts to understand that if Bethel is to change, it must begin with her.

HOUR OF THE WITCH BY CHRIS BOHJALIAN

Boston, 1662. Mary Deerfield is twenty-four-years-old. Her skin is porcelain, her eyes delft blue, and in England she might have had many suitors. But here in the New World, amid this community of saints, Mary is the second wife of Thomas Deerfield, a man as cruel as he is powerful. When Thomas, prone to drunken rage, drives a three-tined fork into the back of Mary’s hand, she resolves that she must divorce him to save her life.

But in a world where every neighbor is watching for signs of the devil, a woman like Mary—a woman who harbors secret desires and finds it difficult to tolerate the brazen hypocrisy of so many men in the colony—soon becomes herself the object of suspicion and rumor. When tainted objects are discovered buried in Mary’s garden, when a boy she has treated with herbs and simples dies, and when their servant girl runs screaming in fright from her home, Mary must fight to not only escape her marriage, but also the gallows.

SLEWFOOT: A TALE OF BEWITCHERY BY BROM

Connecticut, 1666: An ancient spirit awakens in a dark wood. The wildfolk call him Father, slayer, protector.

The colonists call him Slewfoot, demon, devil.

To Abitha, a recently widowed outcast, alone and vulnerable in her pious village, he is the only one she can turn to for help.

Together, they ignite a battle between pagan and Puritan – one that threatens to destroy the entire village, leaving nothing but ashes and bloodshed in their wake.


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