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The Fright Stuff

Horror Pride 2: The New Books Cometh

Hey‌ ‌there‌ horror fans, ‌I’m‌ ‌Jessica‌ ‌Avery‌ ‌and‌ ‌I’ll‌ ‌be‌ ‌delivering‌ ‌your‌ ‌weekly‌ ‌brief‌ ‌of‌ ‌all‌ ‌that’s‌ ‌ghastly‌ ‌and‌ ‌grim‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌world‌ ‌of‌ ‌Horror.‌ ‌Whether‌ ‌you’re‌ ‌looking‌ ‌for‌ ‌a‌ ‌backlist‌ ‌book‌ ‌that‌ ‌will‌ ‌give‌‌ you‌ ‌the‌ ‌willies,‌ ‌a‌ ‌terrifying‌ ‌new‌ ‌release,‌ ‌or‌ ‌the‌ ‌latest‌ ‌in‌ ‌horror‌ ‌community‌ ‌news,‌ ‌you’ll‌ ‌find‌ ‌it‌ ‌here‌ in‌ ‌The‌ ‌Fright‌ ‌Stuff.

Welcome to week two of celebrating queer horror here on The Fright Stuff! I hope everyone is having a wonderful Pride, and getting plenty of reading done in between events! Fun fact: I didn’t plan it this way, but there is actually one new queer horror book on this list for every month from July through November. So. You’re welcome. Let’s all pretend that I was actually that organized on purpose.

Really, though, it worked out that way because there are so many fantastic queer horror titles coming out this year! More than are even listed here because I literally ran out of words to tell you about them all. We may still be short on in-person Pride events this year (for good reasons, obviously), but at least we have books!

The Taking of Jake Livingston by Ryan Douglass (July 13th)

Being able to see the dead is just a part of who Jake Livingston is, just like being one of the only Black kids in his exclusive prep school, or being less popular than his well-liked older brother. But while being a teenager can be an endless series of threats–social, emotional, physical–some more serious than others, at least the dead can be relied upon to be predictable. Most are just harmless fragments of lost life, stuck in a loop of their own death. Sad but safe. Until Sawyer, a powerful vengeful ghost with the ability to put Jake’s very life in danger. In life, Sawyer committed a terrible act of violence, shooting six kids at a local high school and then himself. In death he has plans, and those plans require Jake.

The Dead and the Dark by Courtney Gould (August 3rd)

There are a lot of amazing horror books coming out this summer (Seriously. My bank account weeps.), but this one is particularly high on my radar. Two girls–Logan, whose dads are the stars of the popular TV ghost hunting show ParaSpectors, and Ashley, a Snakebite native whose boyfriend has gone missing–face off against a small town full of secrets, slipping slowly into chaos. The ghost of Ashley’s boyfriend has begun haunting her and the only only one she can trust is Logan, even as their investigation into the town’s secrets threatens everything they believe they know about Snakebite, their families, and themselves.

Summer Sons by Lee Mandelo (September 28th)

Sometimes friendships end quietly. Transitions in our lives nudge us apart from the people we thought we knew better than everyone, and who we thought we’d know forever, and we just drift apart. It’s so gradual you don’t even notice it happening until they’re gone. Andrew and Eddie were best friends, closer than brothers. And when Eddie left to start his graduate program, Andrew knew that he’d be only six months behind him. Until that day, a few days before Andrew was supposed to leave for Nashville, when Eddie died by suicide and left behind a life that Andrew realizes he knew nothing about. A secret life full of strangers and grisly phantoms, lies, secrets; a dark, ugly family history and an Eddie he never knew who spent his days bouncing from a cutthroat academic world to a seedy underground world of vice and violence. Now it’s up to Andrew to discover who his friend really was before Eddie’s secret life can consume him as well.

Flowers for the Sea by Zin E. Rocklyn (October 19th)

Are you tired of me talking about this book yet? Not sorry! I’m so excited about this book. I finally have an ARC on my Kindle and it is just staring me down, waiting for me to finish my pre-determined reading list for this month. Though if any book can tempt me to break from The List, it will probably be Flowers for the Sea. Survivors of a flooded land exist in isolation, fighting for their continued survival on an ark. Supplies are dwindling, hungry, terrifying sea monsters circle – in other words, circumstances are NOT ideal. Among the survivors is Iraxi, pregnant with a child that may not be entirely human. The future of the ark and its survivors is uncertain, and Iraxi’s own fate may be darker still.

Queen of Teeth by Hailey Piper (November 1st)

Jessica, is there anything that Hailey Piper writes that you won’t buy? Probably no. Particularly when it has to do with vagina dentata – because you know that’s going to be wild. Also have you seen that cover? It’s so pink! I love it! When Yaya Betancourt discovers that she has spouted teeth in her vagina, she assumes that it is a side effect of a pharmaceutically-induced genetic condition that she and thousands of others developed in the womb with a little help from AlphaBeta Pharmaceutical. Whoops. But when she realizes that ABP is determined to hunt her down after her incident of toothy sprouting, and when her condition suddenly… worsens, Yaya has to consider the possibility that there may be another, darker motive behind ABP’s pursuit.

Quick Note: If you don’t want to wait until the trade paperback release in November, there are still a few weeks to pre-order a special hardcover edition!

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Speaking of forthcoming queer horror: have you seen the newly released cover for Gretchen Fleker-Martin’s Manhunt? (2.22.22 from Nightfire) Seriously, this book is going to be… well I’d normally say bananas, but that would be the wrong fruit for this context.

One of my favorite horror podcasts Books in the Freezer has released their Pride Month Special so be sure to tune in for even more queer horror recommendations!

This gorgeous story by Allyson Shaw was published in the most recent issue of Fireside Magazine, is available on their website, and is 100% everything that I love.

Over at Book Riot, Steph Auteri has curated a list of must read horror comics to add to your summer reading list.


As always, you can catch me on Twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno Garcia

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend one book for your TBR that I think you’re going to love! Genre fiction is my wheelhouse, and about 90% of my personal TBR, so if you’re looking for recommendations in horror, fantasy, or romance, I’ve got you covered!

If I could describe the absolute perfect niche of Gothic horror fiction it would be “the beautiful house rotting from the inside as a metaphor for human emotional, mental, and or moral decay”. It’s not enough for the house to just be old and haunted, I love it when it is literally decaying out from under the main character as they try to root out the cause of the destruction. And this week’s recommendation is a perfect example.

mexican gothic

Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

Mexican Gothic is set in a remote corner of the Mexican countryside, where a crumbling, old mansion sits almost forgotten amid high mountains and jagged ravines. High Place was once a beautiful, English-style Victorian perched above the Doyle family’s prosperous silver mine. But political turmoil in the country spelled the end of the mine a generation ago, and now the house is falling into ruin while the family passes out of existence one violent death at a time.

This is the family into which Noemí’s cousin Catalina marries, falling out of touch with her family until a frantic, barely coherent letter arrives at Noemí’s home, begging for help. Catalina claims that her new husband, Virgil, is trying to poison her. That her life is in danger at High Place. That the house itself, full of death and rot, is trying to do her harm. Convinced that either Catalina’s husband really is hurting her, or that at least her cousin is in need of psychiatric help her new family will not provide, Noemí makes the journey into the mountains to discover the truth. But what she finds behind the aging veneer of High Place is much darker than she could have imagined.

Steeped in rot and romance, from its beautiful but forbidding landscapes to its moldering aristocratic family, Mexican Gothic is a novel with a deep respect for its literary roots. But Moreno-Garcia’s novel also interrogates its own origins, introducing the Doyle’s as not just a wilting example of European dynasticism but also as a brutal colonizing force preying in more ways than one on the land they have usurped and the people they deem beneath them.

Mexican Gothic is dark and visceral with a gruesome biological twist, and for fans of Gothic fiction it’s a must have for any summer horror TBR.


Happy Reading!
Jessica

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The Fright Stuff

Happy (Scary) Pride, Horror Fans!

Hey‌ ‌there‌ horror fans, ‌I’m‌ ‌Jessica‌ ‌Avery‌ ‌and‌ ‌I’ll‌ ‌be‌ ‌delivering‌ ‌your‌ ‌weekly‌ ‌brief‌ ‌of‌ ‌all‌ ‌that’s‌ ‌ghastly‌ ‌and‌ ‌grim‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌world‌ ‌of‌ ‌Horror.‌ ‌Whether‌ ‌you’re‌ ‌looking‌ ‌for‌ ‌a‌ ‌backlist‌ ‌book‌ ‌that‌ ‌will‌ ‌give‌‌ you‌ ‌the‌ ‌willies,‌ ‌a‌ ‌terrifying‌ ‌new‌ ‌release,‌ ‌or‌ ‌the‌ ‌latest‌ ‌in‌ ‌horror‌ ‌community‌ ‌news,‌ ‌you’ll‌ ‌find‌ ‌it‌ ‌here‌ in‌ ‌The‌ ‌Fright‌ ‌Stuff.

Happy Pride, everyone! Pride’s always a month to celebrate, but I have to admit that I love it just that much more when you add a little (or a lot) of horror. And thanks to this glorious horror boom that we are currently experiencing, I have a wealth of incredible titles to choose from! Which is why I’m going to split this list in two, so we can have two weeks of queer horror recommendations.

This week, I’m going to highlight some of the amazing queer horror titles from the last few years, and believe me when I tell you that this is just a sample of what’s out there. Which is why I’m going to share a couple of lists in the news section at the bottom with even more titles for you to peruse.

Let’s talk books!

The Worm and His Kings by Hailey Piper

I’m a big fan of anything Piper writes at this point, but this was particularly my brand of horror. Set in the New York City of the ‘90s, where it’s easy for people to just disappear and never to be seen again, Worm’s protagonist Monique is on a quest to find her missing girlfriend, Donna. But she’s not the only one who has disappeared in recent days, and as other impoverished women start to vanish from the city streets, Monique begins to hear rumors of monsters stalking the city’s underbelly. In order to save Donna, Monique must follow the rumors deep into the world below New York, a subterranean kingdom of creatures, cultists, and an even more terrible, ancient evil lurking there in the dark.

The Route of Ice and Salt by José Luis Zárate

Okay, so, not actually from the last few years. Technically Zárate’s cult vampire novella was published in 1998, but this gorgeous translation by David Bowles finally made this title available to English-language readers just this year. So I’m counting it! The Route of Ice and Salt is a queer retelling of a small portion of the plot of Bram Stoker’s Dracula: the journey of the doomed Demeter. Varna to Whitby is a route the steadfast captain of the Demeter has traveled many times, alone among his men, dreams full of longings and pleasures he cannot permit himself. But something about this journey is different. Wrong. Rumors spread that something evil is stalking the captain’s ship and the crew are uneasy, looking to their captain to protect them.

The Ravenous Dark by A.M. Strickland

There are not enough dark fantasy polyamory stories in my life. Which is probably why I bought The Ravenous Dark before I even knew what it was really about. Throw in some magic and undead spirits and honestly what else do you need? In Thanopolis, undead spirits are used to control and guard the magically gifted. People like Rovan, whose life was upended when her magic was revealed. Now, surrounded by deceit and danger, she finds herself falling for both a rebellious princess, and the very spirit that now controls her body and soul. But can she trust them? Or will a dangerous secret that threatens all of Thanopolis force her to choose: give into her heart, or betray those she loves.

Cemetery Boys by Aiden Thomas

If you’re looking for something more romantic, delightfully queer, and more moderately scary (versus scare your pants off scary) for your Pride TBR, Aiden Thomas’ Cemetery Boys is the book for you. Yadriel is determined to prove to his traditional family that he is a real brujo so that they will finally accept his true gender. But when he sets out to find and free the spirit of his murdered cousin he accidentally summons the ghost of resident school bad boy, Julian Diaz, who now refuses to leave him alone. Until Yadriel helps Julian find out what happened to him, Julian is determined that he isn’t going anywhere.

A Dowry of Blood by S.T. Gibson

Why have only one Dracula retelling on a list when you can have two? Plus, I could (and will if you let me) talk about this book forever. A Dowry of Blood is the story of Dracula’s brides, told from the perspective of Constanta, the first of three brides whom Dracula creates to be his companions over the course of the novel. It is written as a farewell letter to the man she loved and hated in equal measure, detailing a hundred lifetimes of tenderness, abuse, and the unexpected love that develops between her and her fellow brides. This is one of the best books I’ve read this year, and one of the most beautiful.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Looking for more Queer Horror recommendations? Over on Book Riot, Rah Froemming-Carter’s Hallowqueen list from a few years ago has a range of titles from newer books to horror classics. Tor also has this great list of “Five Horror Novels that Move Beyond the ‘Bury Your Gays’. Trope” And when in doubt there’s always the massive lists (of varying quality) on Goodreads like this Queer Horror one.

MacMillan Library is giving away an ARC of one of the most anticipated horror releases of the year: Catriona Ward’s The Last House on Needless Street. I read this one recently and believe me if you love psychological horror you do not want to miss this title. Plus you might also win a super cute enamel black cat pin!

Cat Scully has threaded some amazing middle grade horror titles that you should add to your TBR!

If you’re looking forward to Hailey Piper’s Queen of Teeth as much as I am, there’s still time to pre-order a hardcover edition from Rooster Republic Press! Pre-orders end June 30th.


As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: Radio Silence by Alyssa Cole

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend one book for your TBR that I think you’re going to love! Genre fiction is my wheelhouse, and about 90% of my personal TBR, so if you’re looking for recommendations in horror, fantasy, or romance, I’ve got you covered!

One of the reasons that I am a huge fan of genre fiction is the existence of subgenres, and their potential for blurring genre lines. Dark Fantasy, Romantic Suspense, Sci-fi Horror – most of my favorite type of books snug down somewhere between the genres that I love and that’s the way I like it. Which is why I was so excited to this week’s post-apocalyptic meets romance mash-up.

Radio Silence by Alyssa Cole

No one knows what caused the blackout that took out all of the country’s major systems – cell service, electricity, water – only that, so far as anyone can tell, they’re not coming back on. And it turns out that civilization goes downhill pretty quick when no one can flush a toilet or turn on the lights. Which is how Arden and her roommate John ended up hiking cross country from Rochester, New York to his parents’ cabin near the Canadian border in search of food and safety.

But when they are attacked a few miles from the cabin, it becomes clear that nowhere is safe, no matter how remote. Gabriel, John’s older brother, comes to the rescue – sparking off an antagonistic attraction between him and Arden – and brings more bad news: their parents are missing. The only ones left in the cabin are Gabriel and their little sister Maggie. Now the four of them – Arden, John, Gabriel, and Maggie – are sharing the cabin, isolated not just geographically but by what seems to be an increasingly hostile world outside their four walls.

I loved this book. So much. I expected to like it because, again, genre mash-ups are my catnip. I did not expect to love this book with every fiber of my being. I did wish at times that it could have more suspenseful, more intense, with regards to the post-apocalyptic portion of the novel. But Radio Silence is primarily a romance novel, so the focus of the novel is on Arden and Gabriel’s sharp chemistry while the blackout serves more as an impetus for their love story, bringing them together and keeping them in close proximity to one another until their attraction has a chance to boil over. That being said, there is definitely still enough of a “threat of the unknown” to keep the tension high, so romantic suspense fans won’t be left wanting.


Happy Reading!
Jessica

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Read This Book

Read This Book: The Whispering Dead by Darcy Coates

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend one book for your TBR that I think you’re going to love! Genre fiction is my wheelhouse, and about 90% of my personal TBR, so if you’re looking for recommendations in horror, fantasy, or romance, I’ve got you covered!

This week’s book is a recent release that is an absolutely perfect read for a stormy summer day, curled up with a cup of something hot and listening to the rain. A short horror novel that is surprisingly cozy with a healthy dose of Gothic, ghostly goodness, it’s a must have for your summer TBR.

The Whispering Dead by Darcy Coates

Kiera wakes up alone on the forest floor, in the dark, with no memories of her past and the sound of nearby gunshots ringing in her ears. While fleeing from her pursuers, she takes shelter with the local pastor who offers to let her stay in the abandoned groundskeeper’s cottage next to the cemetery until she finds out who she is. The Whispering Dead is the first book in Coates’ new Gravekeeper series, which means that we haven’t yet found out who Keira is, who was chasing her, and why she has a head full of covert training that she can’t explain. She’s a bit of a Bourne character, with the notable exception that one of Keira’s inexplicable talents is the ability to see and communicate with the dead.

While we aren’t yet privy to all of Keira’s secrets, it turns out that there is plenty of plot to be had in the picturesque town of Blighty. Soon after Keira arrives she becomes entangled with the ghost of a woman who, according to a grisly chapter in local history, was torn away from the man she loved and murdered by his cruel, overbearing father. But the man who killed Emma was caught, and is himself long dead. So what is keeping her here, roaming the cemetery outside Keira’s cabin? With the help from some new friends, Keira sets out to solve the mystery, and unearths a few of Blighty’s darker secrets in the process.

Though I would definitely still categorize The Whispering Dead as horror, it would be a great crossover recommendation for frequent cozy mystery readers who are looking to make the jump to horror. It has plenty of suspense and ghostly goings on to satisfy horror fans, but it has the obligatory “unusual small town” setting, quirky secondary ensemble cast, and general feeling of a cozy mystery. And while Kiera’s missing past hints that darker things may be waiting later in the series, for now we have budding friendships, the promising of a blossoming romance, and one very, very cute black cat.


Happy Reading!
Jessica

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The Fright Stuff

Sunny Days, Short Nights, and Horror Delights

Hey‌ ‌there‌ horror fans, ‌I’m‌ ‌Jessica‌ ‌Avery‌ ‌and‌ ‌I’ll‌ ‌be‌ ‌delivering‌ ‌your‌ ‌weekly‌ ‌brief‌ ‌of‌ ‌all‌ ‌that’s‌ ‌ghastly‌ ‌and‌ ‌grim‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌world‌ ‌of‌ ‌Horror.‌ ‌Whether‌ ‌you’re‌ ‌looking‌ ‌for‌ ‌a‌ ‌backlist‌ ‌book‌ ‌that‌ ‌will‌ ‌give‌‌ you‌ ‌the‌ ‌willies,‌ ‌a‌ ‌terrifying‌ ‌new‌ ‌release,‌ ‌or‌ ‌the‌ ‌latest‌ ‌in‌ ‌horror‌ ‌community‌ ‌news,‌ ‌you’ll‌ ‌find‌ ‌it‌ ‌here‌ in‌ ‌The‌ ‌Fright‌ ‌Stuff.

Next Monday is a holiday here in the States which means no new Fright Stuff, so I thought we’d take this last newsletter in May to prep your TBRs for June! This summer is going to be positively packed with horror, not to mention the various other denominations of dark fiction. I could not be more excited! (My bank account, on the other hand, is afraid. So afraid.)

I know we usually associate horror with all things autumnal, but there’s just something about summer that makes me crave horror. It’s all summer camps, isolated lake cabins, and sea monsters, and I love it. (What, you’re summer doesn’t involve sea monsters?) So as the weather warms up in the northern hemisphere, and my toes finally remember what it’s like not to be frozen for months on end, I’m thinking ahead to long summer days and piles upon piles of new horror reads.

Let’s get started!

Bacchanal by Veronica G. Henry (June 1)

You know how much I love carnival and circus horror, but be forewarned: Veronica Henry’s June release may be called Bacchanal, but it’s no party. The titular Bacchanal Carnival conceals a terrible evil behind the veneer of a traveling Depression-era carnival, roaming the South. But Eliza Meeks, its newest member, is unaware of the danger. To her, the carnival is her only way out of Baton Rouge, and she quickly finds herself at home among the troupe of performers, carnies, and barkers, many of whom are far stranger than Eliza and her unusual gift of speaking to animals. She has no idea that an ancient demon resides at the heart of Bacchanal, preying on the innocent, or that she may be the only one capable of defeating it.

For the Wolf by Hannah Whitten (June 15)

I don’t even have words for how excited I am about this book. I basically just spend my days refreshing my Barnes & Noble order page, waiting for it to ship… Okay I exaggerate. But seriously this is going to be complete catnip and I’m so ready. I blame Angela Carter for the fact that I’m helpless in the face of any dark fantasy fantasy retelling of Red Riding Hood. She ruined me, and Whitten is going to finish the job. Red is a Second Daughter, the first in centuries, which means that her one purpose in life is to be sacrificed. The Wolf in the Wood holds the world’s gods captive and every second daughter born is sacrificed in hopes that he might release them. But what she finds in the depths of the Wilderwood is a tangle of lies, and everything she thought she knew about her world comes undone.

(Oh. This one is going to hit me right in the obsessed Dragon Age fan feels, I can already tell.)

The Queen of the Cicadas by V. Castro (June 22)

At this point if V. Castro writes a book I barely stop to read the synopsis before I buy. Her books are just THAT good. This one, in particularly, I’m super excited for! In 2018, Belinda Alvarez returns to south Texas to attend her best friend’s wedding at a picturesque farm that happens to be the site of an eerie urban legend: La Reina de Las Chicharras. The Queen of the Cicadas. A murdered farmworker in the 1950s made a deal with an Aztec goddess of death to live again and take her vengeance on those who hurt her and those who forgot her. Now, as the legend unfolds, Belinda finds that her life – and that of the farmhouse owner, Hector – is entwined with that of the murdered woman, Milagros. As the two become immersed in the past it becomes clear that Milagros’ fate may be theirs as well.

Survive the Night by Riley Sager (June 29)

Okay, so, I’m REALLY excited about this book. Playing up the isolation of a world before cellphones, and the vast emptiness of rural highways, Sager sets the stage for what promises to be a heart pounding new thriller guaranteed to keep us guessing! Charlie Jordan is a grief-stricken college student sharing the long ride home to Ohio with another student she barely knows. Josh claims that he’s hurrying home to help care for his sick father, and Charlie is fleeing her survivor guilt after her best friend fell prey to the Campus Killer, a serial offender stalking the college grounds. But trapped in a car with Josh on an empty highway in the middle of the night, Charlie starts to have doubts about her traveling companion. Now Charlie loves movies, she’s even named after a Hitchcock heroine, so it could just be her murder-fueled imagination talking. But there are holes in Josh’s story, and something in the trunk he doesn’t want her to see.

Fresh From the Skeleton’s Mouth

Speaking of Summertime horror, is anyone else impatiently counting the days until Netflix’s three film Fear Street series?

If you’re looking for something to watch while you wait, Melissa Baron over at Book Riot has a list of 13 horror movie and TV adaptations that you can stream now! And in other Book Riot news, we’ve got a giveaway going for a chance to win an iPad Mini! Enter here!

V. Castro wrote a fantastic piece for the Nightfire blog on The Vision, Voice, and Authenticity of Chicana Horror.

Okay so not technically book related, but I know how popular the original movie is with the horror community so: Sarah Jessica Parker, Bette Midler and Kathy Najimy are all officially returning for a Hocus Pocus sequel and I am basically one giant scream of joy.


As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

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Read This Book

Read This Book: Dark Lullaby by Polly Ho-Yen

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend one book for your TBR that I think you’re going to love! Genre fiction is my wheelhouse, and about 90% of my personal TBR, so if you’re looking for recommendations in horror, fantasy, or romance, I’ve got you covered!

I’m going to need a minute to collect myself, folks, because this week’s recommendation is A Lot. It’s one of those books that you know you have to have the minute you read the synopsis, and even before you start reading you know it’s going to be amazing. And it was. But this week’s book also takes the prize as one of the most upsetting, emotionally violent books that I’ve read in years.

Dark Lullaby by Polly Ho-Yen

Dark Lullaby is a bleak portrait of a future in which the world’s population has contracted. Sharply. Entire villages stand empty, abandoned, as the remaining population squeezes into city centers. Infertility has reached a staggering 99.8%, and natural conception is nearly unheard of. Children can only be conceived by Induction, a dangerous and difficult process of conception that kills women nearly as frequently as it succeeds in impregnating them.

And the trials don’t end there. Children have become the world’s most precious resource, and their rearing the primary business of the ominous Office of Standards in Parenting (OSIP). Fail to meet their exacting standards of perfect parenthood and your child will be extracted… for its own good, of course. In a society in which the majority of parents have their children taken from them, Kit knew the risks when she chose to have a child. But that doesn’t mean that she’s going to allow anyone to take her daughter from her without putting up a fight.

This book was such an upsetting read for me because you could clearly see how a future like the one Polly Ho-Yen depicts could be possible. Every description, every terrible reality that for these people was simply the “norm”, every bit of propaganda – it was so anxiety-inducing because I could see where Ho-Yen had found her inspiration. The world of Dark Lullaby is our world, just with all the dials turned up to ten. And being able to see that reflection of ourselves in the terrible mirror that Ho-Yen holds up was so unsettling that there were times when I felt physically ill.

Dark Lullaby is definitely a must read for horror or dark sci-fi fans. But be forewarned: this is not an easy read. It will enthrall you from page one, and haunt you long after it’s done.

Happy Reading!
Jessica

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The Fright Stuff

More Secrets Than Stop Signs

Hey‌ ‌there‌ horror fans, ‌I’m‌ ‌Jessica‌ ‌Avery‌ ‌and‌ ‌I’ll‌ ‌be‌ ‌delivering‌ ‌your‌ ‌weekly‌ ‌brief‌ ‌of‌ ‌all‌ ‌that’s‌ ‌ghastly‌ ‌and‌ ‌grim‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌world‌ ‌of‌ ‌Horror.‌ ‌Whether‌ ‌you’re‌ ‌looking‌ ‌for‌ ‌a‌ ‌backlist‌ ‌book‌ ‌that‌ ‌will‌ ‌give‌‌ you‌ ‌the‌ ‌willies,‌ ‌a‌ ‌terrifying‌ ‌new‌ ‌release,‌ ‌or‌ ‌the‌ ‌latest‌ ‌in‌ ‌horror‌ ‌community‌ ‌news,‌ ‌you’ll‌ ‌find‌ ‌it‌ ‌here‌ in‌ ‌The‌ ‌Fright‌ ‌Stuff.

Everyone can close their eyes and conjure an image of a small town without much effort. Clusters of houses, some small, some big, old, and empty, set back from dusty, cracked streets that the local municipality can’t be bothered to resurface. The cracks always come back anyway. It’s faded, but still pretty. People passing through, stopping at the one gas station in the middle of town (probably right next to the diner), will remember it as “quaint.”

But any horror reader could tell you that no matter how pretty or idyllic the surface, no place hides secrets deeper or darker than a small town. So this week on The Fright Stuff we’re celebrating some recent and forthcoming works of small town horror that explore the claustrophobic nightmare of a town in crisis, when everything it’s tried to keep hidden comes slithering up through the cracks.

The Whispering Dead by Darcy Coates

On a dark and stormy night (yes, literally), a woman on the run takes shelter in an abandoned groundskeeper’s cottage at the edge of a cemetery in the town of Blighty. Frankly, I think it sounds positively peaceful but then again I have noisy neighbors. And technically, so does Keira. Because while to others the cemetery would appear still and silent, Kiera can hear the dead whispering all around her. The cemetery is alive with the ghosts of those recently, and not so recently, departed, led by a woman who died before her time who begins to haunt Keira when she realizes that the living woman can see her. With the clock of her life running down, Keira races to unearth the dark secrets of Blighty’s past that will not let the woman’s spirit rest.

My Heart is a Chainsaw by Stephen Graham Jones (August 31)

I honestly don’t have words for how excited I am for this book. All I know is that it had me at slasher homage, and August can’t come too soon. Most people think of small towns as intimate places where “everyone knows everyone” and everyone is at home. But when you are an outcast – the one person who doesn’t belong in a town that everyone else calls home – a small town can be the loneliest place in the world. Jade Daniels is the outcast in Proofrock, a small lake town slowly being overrun by gentrification. In her anger and her loneliness, Jade turns to horror for comfort, letting herself get lost in a world of masked killers and revenge. But when Proofrock’s wealthy newcomers begin dying in bizarre ways, Jade realizes that there is a familiar pattern to their deaths. A pattern that only she can see, and that may foretell a massacre in the making.

The Ghost Tree by Christina Henry

Lauren’s small town of Smith’s Hollow has a serious amnesia problem. Because they forgot that a year ago her father was found murdered with his heart ripped out, and even though the bodies of two girls have just been found torn apart, Lauren knows that it’s just a matter of time before they’re forgotten too. The police will never find the killer, and everyone will just move on. But somewhere out there in the woods a monster lurks and Lauren is determined to track it down before it can kill anyone else. She’s not going to “just move on” like everyone else, even if hunting the monster means uncovering frightening truths about the small town she calls home.

White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson (September 14)

For Marigold, recently arrived from her California hometown by the sea, Cedarville is supposed to be a new beginning. But there’s something sinister lurking beneath the renovated façade of their new house, tucked between its rundown neighbors like a beacon of revitalization and change. Things move on their own, doors open, lights turn off. Marigold sees shadows, hears voices, and there’s a bad smell inside the house that no one else seems to notice. The more Marigold learns about the house, however, the more she realizes that the danger isn’t contained just within its walls. All of Cedarville is haunted by secrets from its past that will no longer be contained.

The Dead and the Dark by Courtney Gould (August 17)

In Courtney Gould’s forthcoming small town horror, two girls–Logan, whose dads are the stars of the popular TV ghost hunting show ParaSpectors, and Ashley, a Snakebite native whose boyfriend has gone missing–face off against a small town full of secrets, slipping slowly into chaos. Ashley’s boyfriend was only the first in a string of teenage disappearances, only the dead have returned, and even the weather has turned unnatural. What’s more, the dead are not sleeping easy. The ghost of Ashley’s boyfriend has begun haunting her and the only one she can trust is Logan, even as their investigation into the town’s secrets threatens everything they believe they know about Snakebite, their families, and themselves.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

S.T. Gibson (A Dowry of Blood) and Lauren Blackwood (Within These Wicked Walls) are joining forces at 8pm EST on May 20th on Gibson’s Instagram to talk about gothic lit and reimaginings!

This awesome horror subgenre chart that the Horror Writers Association made is both delightful and extremely useful. Also, does anyone else really REALLY want a poster version for their reading room?

Don’t forget to browse our Horror Archive over at Book Riot if you’re looking for your next great horror read!

Speaking of Book Riot, we’ve got a giveaway going for a chance to win an iPad Mini! Enter here!


As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.

Categories
Read This Book

Read This Book: The Lady from the Black Lagoon

Welcome to Read This Book, the newsletter where I recommend one book for your TBR that I think you’re going to love! Genre fiction is my wheelhouse, and about 90% of my personal TBR, so if if you’re looking for recommendations in horror, fantasy, or romance, I’ve got you covered!

When I love a piece of media, I can get a bit… obsessed. I want to know everything about it. Is there lore I can consume? A sequel I can preorder? Behind the scenes footage I can our into my eyeballs? I want it. This is one of the reasons – aside from the fact that almost a decade of academic analysis is a hard habit to break – that I love critical texts and supplemental books that allow me re-visit and get a new perspective on books or films that I love. This week’s title is a piece of non-fiction tangentially related to one of my favorite films of all time: Creature from the Black Lagoon.

The Lady From the Black Lagoon cover image

The Lady from the Black Lagoon by Mallory O’Meara

Chances are that if you follow any book related social media you heard about The Lady from the Black Lagoon when it was published back in 2019. Mallory O’Meara’s biography of monster creator and artist Milicent Patrick shines a light on a forgotten figure in Hollywood history, and is also part memoir and part scathing critique of the ways in which men have done their best to oppress talented women in art and film industries for decades.

The star monster of Creature from the Black Lagoon, the much beloved Gill Man, was the last of Universal Studios classic monsters to make his on-screen debut. These days, his appearance is iconic but the woman responsible for his creation is largely unknown. Or she was, until Mallory O’Meara began researching what would become The Lady from the Black Lagoon. And the more O’Meara shares with her readers about Patrick’s life – as one of the first female animators at Disney and a creator in an industry that was, and a genre that still is, largely dominated by men – the more you realize what an incredible life she led.

And O’Meara’s recounting of her research journey is as fascinating as it is entertaining. Her footnotes frequently had me laughing out loud, which is what you want from footnotes if you can possibly get it. So whether you’re a horror fan, a fan of old Hollywood History, a devotee of amazing women, or all three, The Lady from the Black Lagoon should definitely be on your TBR!


Happy Reading!

Jessica

Categories
The Fright Stuff

Don’t Mess With Horror Moms

Hey‌ ‌there‌ horror fans, ‌I’m‌ ‌Jessica‌ ‌Avery‌ ‌and‌ ‌I’ll‌ ‌be‌ ‌delivering‌ ‌your‌ ‌weekly‌ ‌brief‌ ‌of‌ ‌all‌ ‌that’s‌ ‌ghastly‌ ‌and‌ ‌grim‌ ‌in‌ ‌the‌ ‌world‌ ‌of‌ ‌Horror.‌ ‌Whether‌ ‌you’re‌ ‌looking‌ ‌for‌ ‌a‌ ‌backlist‌ ‌book‌ ‌that‌ ‌will‌ ‌give‌‌ you‌ ‌the‌ ‌willies,‌ ‌a‌ ‌terrifying‌ ‌new‌ ‌release,‌ ‌or‌ ‌the‌ ‌latest‌ ‌in‌ ‌horror‌ ‌community‌ ‌news,‌ ‌you’ll‌ ‌find‌ ‌it‌ ‌here‌ in‌ ‌The‌ ‌Fright‌ ‌Stuff.‌

It’s true that the horror genre doesn’t always have a good track record when it comes to mothers. There’s an abundance of dead or monstrous mothers in horror that can definitely be blamed on the fact that the genre’s literary roots are sunk deep into the fertile, dead-and/or-absent-mothers soil of fairy tales and Gothic Romanticism. But for every absent or terrible mother-figure in the horror genre, there’s a badass mom going to (often bloody) extremes to protect her family, or to exact revenge on those who hurt them. So since yesterday was Mother’s Day here in the states, and since there are so many incredible recent and forthcoming titles about motherhood that I can’t wait to share with you, this week’s Fright Stuff is dedicated to the horror moms who get it done. No matter what it takes!

Dark Lullaby by Polly Ho-Yen

Dark Lullaby was one of those impulse buy books where the minute I read the synopsis I went straight to my buyer of choice and added it to my cart. Toted as Black Mirror meets The Handmaid’s Tale, Dark Lullaby is set in a near future society where parenting is strictly monitored and children not being reared to the exacting requirements of the Office of Standards in Parenting are Extracted. Kit thinks she knows the risks when she decides to have a child, and that she can live up to the depends of the OSIP. But when she comes under the Office’s scrutiny she has to decide how far she will go to protect her family.

crossroads by laurel hightower cover

Crossroads by Laurel Hightower

Any book about the tragic death of a child is going to be a harrowing read, and Crossroads is as much about grief as it is about ghosts. Chris’ son Trey dies in a tragic car crash and takes her whole world with him. Until the day a drop of her blood falls on her son’s roadside memorial and changes everything. That night Chris sees her son’s ghost outside her window – or so she believes. But is it really her son? Or does something far more sinister lurk behind the face of the child she lost? And how deeply will Chris entangle herself with these dark forces if it means seeing Trey alive again?

Sorrowland cover

Sorrowland by Rivers Solomon

Rivers Solomon’s newest book – hot off the presses from its May 4th release! – is about the metamorphic nature of motherhood, and what one mother will do to protect her children from the world in which she was raised. Vern fled the strict religious compound in which she grew up when she was seven months pregnant and took shelter in the woods, where she gives birth to twins. But the community she fled will not give her up so easily, and when Vern is forced to fight back against them her body begins to undergo a series of strange and frightening metamorphoses.

Immortelle by Catherine McCarthy

You’ll have to wait a couple of months for Catherine McCarthy’s forthcoming novel Immortelle (July 15) but it is definitely going to be worth the wait. Elinor, a ceramic artist whose work is inspired by her grandmother’s interest in the supernatural, bends her craft to its own supernatural purpose when her daughter Rowena is murdered. Elinor is sure she knows who is responsible, so she crafts an immortelle out of clay in the shape of a starling to try and capture Rowena’s spirit. As word of her skill spreads, Elinor is soon overwhelmed by requests for immortelles, her power growing with each crafting. And as the dead whisper their secrets and the truth about her daughter’s murder is revealed, Elinor begins to craft her terrible revenge.

Flowers for the Sea by Zin E Rocklyn

Zin E Rocklyn’s Flowers for the Sea (October 19) is yet another reason to wish that October would hurry up and get here this year! I’m so excited about this book. Survivors of a flooded land exist in isolation, fighting for their continued survival on an ark. Supplies are dwindling, hungry, terrifying sea monsters circle – in other words, circumstances are NOT ideal. Among the survivors is Iraxi, pregnant with a child that may not be entirely human. The future of the ark and its survivors is uncertain, and Iraxi’s own fate may be darker still.

Fresh from the Skeleton’s Mouth

Nightfire has published their list of May horror releases!

Okay so this is not exclusively book horror related, it’s more horror in general. But Pride month in the horror community is my hands down favorite time of the year, and this To “Die” For t-shirt from Mixtape Massacre and Gayly Deadful is so gorgeous I could “die”. (Ba dum tish) And, most importantly, all Profits from the sales of this tee or sticker will be donated to the Transgender Law Center. So buy so rainbow horror gear and do good works!

We have some creepy new horror content for you over at Book Riot, from Kelly Jensen’s delightfully nostalgic post of Goosebumps swag to Rey Rowland’s list of must-read horror anthologies! And if you missed my recent historical horror newsletter, it’s been added to the site. So go forth and fill your TBR!

Speaking of Book Riot, we’ve got a giveaway going for a chance to win an iPad Mini! Enter here!


As always, you can catch me on twitter at @JtheBookworm, where I try to keep up on all that’s new and frightening.