Showing posts with label gothic. Show all posts
Showing posts with label gothic. Show all posts

Wednesday, August 27, 2025

All of Us Murderers by KJ Charles

August 18, 2025

All of Us Murderers by KJ Charles

Zeb Wyckham is surprised when his cousin invites him to his country house for a visit, but he arrives to find himself at the family reunion from hell. Worse yet, his ex-boyfriend who hates him for ruining his life is now working for his cousin. Could it possibly get worse? Actually, yes.

A locked-room mystery combined with an LGBTQ romance seasoned with an element of horror. There is plenty of suspense and sexual tension, plus a few steamy scenes. I love mysteries set at English country houses. The cover reminds me of the covers on old Victoria Holt romantic suspense novels (consumed those like candy when I was a teen).

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.

See what I mean about the Victoria Holt covers?


Sunday, September 29, 2024

Return to Wyldcliffe Heights by Carol Goodman

September 28, 2024

Return to Wyldcliffe Heights by Carol Goodman

Ever since her bestselling romantic suspense novel was published, fans of reclusive author Veronica St. Clair have been clamoring for the author to write a sequel. When editorial assistant Agnes Corey loses her job at the publishing house that published the novel, she secures a position as the author's assistant to help her write a sequel. Little does she know that the job will open up a window into her own life story.

When I was in high school, I was a huge fan of Victoria Holt's gothic novels. The cover and description reminded me of those books (in fact, at least one is referenced in the text), but this one is no where near as well written or engaging. It's a book within a book, a trope which sometimes works and sometimes doesn't. There are too many dreams that repeat the same thing, too much falling asleep in the bathtub. The plot is really slow moving and the characters are unlikeable as well as confusing. All the narrative threads are jumbled together at the end in a confusing heap, with the characters proving to be exceptionally stupid. It was a slog to get through, and a good editor should have deleted at least 25 pages. It will appeal to readers who are big gothic fans - maybe.

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.


I remember this being one of my favorite Victoria Holt novels

Wednesday, April 10, 2024

The House on Biscayne Bay by Chanel Cleeton

April 9, 2024

The House on Biscayne Bay by Chanel Cleeton

After the sudden death of her parents, Carmen Acosta travels from Cuba to Miami to stay with her sister and brother-in-law, Carolina and Asher Wyatt. They own a grand house on Biscayne Bay, originally built right after World War I for Anna and Robert Barnes, a wealthy New York couple. The house is beautiful but creepy, like the peacocks that roam the property and scream at odd times. Her sister is oddly absent when Carmen arrives, and Carmen quickly senses that all is not right with her sister's marriage. She also comes to realize that whatever is troubling Carolina has something to do with the history of the house.


Atmospheric, reminiscent of classic gothic tales like Rebecca or Wuthering Heights, with all the traditional gothic elements: a big isolated house, creepy grounds, characters who pop up out of no where, an innocent young heroine, an aloof older man. I loved a good gothic when I was in high school - Victoria Holt was a fave! Will also appeal to fans of Silvia Moreno-Garcia in addition to readers of gothic fiction.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.


Biscayne Bay

Thursday, December 28, 2023

Thirst by Marina Yuszczuk

December 21, 2023

Thirst by Marina Yuszczuk

A female vampire escapes from Europe and arrives in Buenos Aires, Argentina. She describes her fight to survive, and as she watches the city change over the centuries, she decides to imprison herself in a deserted mausoleum in an old but famous cemetery. In the present day, a woman who works for a publishing house is trying to deal with her mother's terminal illness. After her mother gives her the deed to a mausoleum and a key, the woman finds herself inexplicably returning to the cemetery repeatedly. As they face fear, loneliness, and longing, the two women find themselves drawn to each other.

I am not a huge horror fan and this novel is not something that I normally would pick up, but once I started reading Thirst, it was hard to put down. The writing and the translation are both excellent. Set in two different timelines, it's a vampire story combined with feminist themes. The author is one of the new voices in Latinx literature. More sensitive readers should be aware that there are some erotic/explicit scenes.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC for review.


Recoleta Cemetery in Buenos Aires - Eva Peron is interred here 

Saturday, September 16, 2023

Vampires of el Norte by Isabel Canas

September 14, 2023

Vampires of el Norte by Isabel Canas

Growing up on Nena's father's ranch in Tejas (Texas), Nena and Nestor were inseparable as children. But when they were 13, Nestor flees from the ranch, believing that Nena is dead and that it is his fault. Nine years later, Nestor returns to find Nena alive and grown, working as a healer. But the peaceful life of the ranch is threatened by the whites from the north as well as a supernatural creature that steals souls as well as lives.

It's almost fall, so it's time for some seasonal reading, in this case Mexican gothic. Full of folktales, legends, and family stories with a romance thrown in. The vampires in the story aren't only the supernatural kind. If you like the novels of Silvia Moreno-Garcia, you'll enjoy Vampires of el Norte.


The chupacabra, which figures in Mexican folklore and may be the vampire in the story

Tuesday, November 29, 2022

The Villa by Rachel Hawkins

November 28, 2022

The Villa by Rachel Hawkins

Emily Sheridan and Chess Chandler have been friends since elementary school. Both are writers: Emily writes cozy mysteries and Chess writes self-help books. Following a bad period in Emily's life, Chess suggests they spend the summer at a villa in Italy where both can work on their writing. At first, the house seems like the perfect place to spend the summer. But when Emily learns that a murder occurred at the villa 50 years earlier, she begins to dig deeper into the story.

There are two timelines here, set 50 years apart, that mirror each other to a certain extent. I figured out the plot about one third of the way into the story. But there were some unexpected twists as well as two different endings, and the reader is left wondering about the truth. Quite a few of the characters are unlikeable, so it didn't bother me when they died or got killed. This is enjoyable escape fiction, well-written, that is perfect for vacation, and readers of psychological or suspense fiction will be drawn into the story.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an eARC.

Orvieto, Italy, the setting for The Villa

Sunday, November 20, 2022

The Maker of Swans by Paraic O'Donnell

November 20, 2022

Eustace is a servant to Mr. Crowe, a mysterious man with a magical literary talent. Crowe shares his home with his ward, Clara, a mute girl who is extremely intelligent, and writes and draws. But when Mr. Crowe commits a violation of the rules that govern his magic and is set a task to atone for his offense, Clara is abducted until Mr. Crowe completes his punishment.

This is a difficult book to review. The writing is gorgeous and lush, and I really enjoyed listening to the story. Also, the characters are fascinating and I wanted to learn more about them. The book has two parts: the first part has very little magic in it and is just a good story about a reclusive man, his faithful servant who cleans up his messes, and the child who lives with them. The second part is about Eustace descending into despair after Clara is abducted, and also about Clara's imprisonment.

One of the novel's problems is that Mr. Crowe's magical power is referred to in only the vaguest of terms, so vague that the reader isn't sure what it is that he can do. It sounds like he might be a writer's muse of some sort, but it isn't clear. Another problem is that the book ends quite abruptly. Some people loved it, but I'm ambivalent.

Friday, October 28, 2022

Gallant by V. E. Schwab

June 22, 2022

Gallant by V. E. Schwab

Olivia Prior grew up in the Merilance School, essentially an orphanage for girls. All she has left from her mother is a journal that has several pages ripped out. But then a letter arrives, inviting her to Gallant, her mother's family's home. But when she arrives, no one is expecting her or admits to having invited her. Her cousin is hostile toward her, and Olivia sees shadowy figures, but she is not about to leave until she gets some answers. One day, Olivia crosses through a gate at the bottom of the garden and finds herself in an alternate version of Gallant.

The atmosphere is gothic and the writing is good but the plot is sketchy. The main theme is that everything has a mirror image that is the opposite. I like Schwab's adult books better than her YA books. It didn't really hold my attention, although I did like the cover.


Wednesday, October 26, 2022

The Dead Travel Fast by Deanna Raybourn

October 26, 2022

The Dead Travel Fast by Deanna Raybourn

Orphaned following the death of her grandfather, Theodora Lestrange is a 23 year old spinster living in Edinburgh with her sister and her husband and their five children. Theodora does have a suitor, but rather than entering a life of domesticity, what she really wants is to travel and write a novel. When a school friend invites her to come and stay at her family's castle in Rumania, Theodora jumps at the chance to leave Scotland and her sister's house and have an adventure.

I have enjoyed the author's other books, and while I'm not much of a romance reader, this is a good choice for the Halloween season. It is much different than her other books, much more a traditional gothic novel with castles and legends and a mysterious count, all set in Transylvania. The story pays homage to both Dracula and Northanger Abbey. It does have kind of a racy cover.

Castle in Transylvania

Tuesday, September 13, 2022

My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier

November 6, 2021

My Cousin Rachel by Daphne du Maurier

Philip Ashley was orphaned as a child and was raised by his cousin Ambrose. They share a quiet life at Ambrose's Cornwall estate. Ambrose suffers from a weak chest and routinely spends the winter in Italy, away from the damp English winters, and they write to each other regularly. Shortly before Philip's 25th birthday, Ambrose writes to Philip to tell him that he has met a widowed cousin of theirs named Rachel, that they have fallen in love and married. The newlyweds have no plans to return to England.

Ambrose's letters to Philip become increasingly erratic and Philip decides to journey to Italy to check on Ambrose himself. He arrives in Florence only to find that Ambrose is dead and his new bride has left their villa. Unable to locate her, Philip returns to England, where his guardian Nick informs him that he received a letter from Rachel's man of business, stating two things: Ambrose did not have time to change his will, and Philip is still heir to his estate; and Rachel is on her way to England. She arrives at the estate and Philip falls increasingly under her spell. As his cousin's widow, he transfers the estate over to her. Philip falls ill almost immediately and it takes several weeks for him to recover. He suspects that Rachel poisoned him, but he has no proof. But he is certain that she is trying to kill him and sets a trap for her.

My Cousin Rachel is du Maurier's third most popular book. Like her other books, it has a mystery/romance theme with gothic overtones. A good choice for a gloomy fall evening.


Cornwall estate


Monday, August 29, 2022

The Last Dreamwalker by Rita Woods

August 29, 2022

The Last Dreamwalker by Rita Woods

Layla Hurley and her mother Elinor never got along. From childhood, Layla was plagued by strange and destructive dreams that her mother choses to ignore. After a final argument, Layla and her mother hadn't spoken for' a long time. Then Elinor died suddenly, and Layla regretted never having resolved their conflict. Her mother's two sister (who Elinor was also estranged from) show up at the funeral, bringing Layla an unexpected inheritance, an old rice plantation called Ainsli Green, on an island off the coast of South Carolina. The envelope also contains information about the family "gift," the ability to invade other people's dreams. As Layla looks through the information, she recognized a picture of a woman who is the same one who haunts her dreams. She resists accepting the truth, until one of her brothers also begins experiencing the same type of destructive dreams.

Meh. Needed a good editor (one of my favorite criticisms) since there are a lot of scenes that don't advance the plot or the characters, and the book could have been at least 50 pages shorter. Scenes are repeated sometimes more than once. The narrative flips back and forth between two time periods and two narrators. Layla spends a lot of time wandering around in a fog and vomiting. Too many dreams, too much drama. Might appeal to YA readers.

Many thanks to Edelweiss and the publisher for providing an eARC.

Tuesday, April 28, 2020

Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

April 27, 2020

Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

After receiving a frantic letter from her recently married cousin Catalina, Noemi Taboada is sent by her family to visit Catalina and scope out the situation.  Traveling to a remote mountainous region of Mexico, Noemi arrives at High Place, the family home of the English Doyle family.  The house is isolated and neglected with a group of secretive and silent residents who follow a set of strict house rules.


The local doctor informs Noemi that Catalina has a mild case of tuberculosis and requires rest and good food to recover.  The family quickly squashes Noemi's efforts to bring in a psychologist to examine Catalina, and it becomes clear that Noemi is an unwelcome, meddlesome guest.  Soon after arriving at the house, Noemi begins to experience a series of disturbing dreams or hallucinations.  At the same time, she continues to push for more information about her cousin's condition and unexpectedly uncovers horrific secrets about the Doyle family that could threaten her very life.

There are strong gothic overtones similar to Wuthering Heights or Rebecca:  creepy setting, perpetual fog or mist, run-down old house, controlling patriarch, rigid housekeeper, imprisoned wife.  There is a little bit of everything here:  gothic, mystery, horror, historical fiction, folklore.  

I didn't like this one as well as Moreno-Garcia's first book Gods of Jade and Shadows.  But if you like your fiction with a dose of weird, this could be for you.

Tuesday, October 22, 2019

The Stranger Diaries by Elly Griffiths


October 21, 2019

The Stranger Diaries by Elly Griffiths



Clare Cassidy is a secondary English school teacher in an English town in West Sussex, specializing in the works of literary works of Victorian author R. M. Holland.  Part of the school where she teaches was Holland’s house, where a number of rooms have been preserved exactly as they were when the writer lived there.  Clare is devastated to learn that a fellow teacher and close friend has been found murdered, with a quote from Holland’s most famous story next to her body.  But things go from bad to worse when Clare’s life begins to echo some of her favorite pieces of literature.  She turns to her diary to record her feelings, only to find that some unknown person has been reading her diary and writing in it.

This is a modern gothic with a classic whodunit feeling, perfect for October reading.  Many of the themes that occur in classic gothic and supernatural fiction are included:  a creepy old school with a resident ghost, an abandoned factory, isolated houses, unreliable narrators, heavy fog and darkness, screams in the night, mysterious lights that flicker on and off.  I liked the story-within-a-story structure, as well as the plot twists that keep the reader guessing.  The three narrators all have distinct voices and are each likable in their own way – I especially liked the fact that Clare adores her rescue dog (Herbert) and doesn’t care who knows it.  Herbert is a little guy but has the heart of a lion and doesn’t hesitate to defend his humans.

Another thing I liked about The Stranger Diaries was that the lead detective is a smart woman – she doesn’t miss obvious and not-so-obvious clues and have to have some bystander point them out or figure out the solution for her.

Except for the fact that the killer's motive is a little weak, this is an excellent read.

And yes, Herbert is alive and well at the end of the book.

Tuesday, October 15, 2019

The Best of Edgar Allan Poe by Edgar Allan Poe


October 15, 2019

The Best of Edgar Allan Poe by Edgar Allan Poe

‘Tis the season for scary stories.  When you say the name “Edgar Allan Poe,” it immediately conjures thoughts of horror, darkness, and death.  Most people are familiar with a few of his works from middle or high school (The Raven, Annabel Lee, The Pit and the Pendulum, The Cask of Amontillado).  This collection includes some of his best known tales and also some lesser known stories.  Poe’s characters are motivated by the same passions and emotions that have moved people throughout history:  jealousy, revenge, unrequited love, greed, hate, fear, obsession, guilt.  I wouldn't classify these stories as horror compared with the horror fiction being written today (look up splatterpunk in your library's catalog for the really gory stuff).  Poe’s terrors tend to be psychological fears and phobias:  buried alive, darkness, rats, imprisonment or being trapped, madness.  Eleven of Poe’s short stories are included in this collection – like any collection, some are better than others.



Tuesday, October 8, 2019

This House is Haunted by John Boyne


October 8, 2019

This House is Haunted by John Boyne

It’s October, so the time has come for scary things, like ghost stories.  After the death of her father, Eliza Caine applies for a position as a governess for two children at a country house, Gaudlin Hall in Norfolk.  But when she arrives, there are no adults present and the children are alone with no explanation for the missing adults.  Eliza soon learns that there is some creepy stuff going on in the house, and when she enquires about the family, the villagers give her strange looks.  Eliza eventually learns that she is the sixth governess to hold that position in a year.  The children refer to their mother frequently, how she expects them to dress and act, and Eliza begins to suspect that her ghost is haunting Gaudlin Hall.

Written in the style of Dickens, some readers have complained that the story isn’t scary enough (or at all scary), but this is a ghost story for those who enjoy literary fiction and pays homage to the classic ghost story The Turn of the Screw by Henry James, as well as Jane Eyre and the ghost stories of Edith Wharton.  Disquieting and atmospheric rather than horrifying, this is gothic fiction in the style of the Victorian era.  With none of the gore or violence that characterizes many modern ghost stories, this is a perfect book to curl up with on a chilly October night, with a fluffy throw, a cup of tea or a glass of wine, and a plate of shortbread cookies (and the dog or cat, of course).  I love just about anything that John Boyne writes, and while this novel isn’t quite as good as most of his other books (such as The Heart’s Invisible Furies), the writing is elegant and it’s still worth reading.

N.B., if you are interested in gory, violent, unlimited horror, search “splatterpunk” in your library’s online catalog. 



Monday, July 15, 2019

The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware


July 15, 2019

The Turn of the Key by Ruth Ware

The first time that I realized that my iPhone and iPad “talk” to each other (usually when I’m not around), I was totally creeped out.  Ruth Ware takes that uneasy feeling to its highest level in her latest novel, The Turn of the Key.

When Rowan Cain comes across a job posting for a live-in nanny at an incredible salary, she thinks it must be too good to be true but applies anyway.  She gets the job and at first, it seems like a perfect situation in a beautiful house in the Scottish Highlands.  The parents are both architects, and their house is a “smart” house designed to test out various kinds of technologies, including touchpad controls, surveillance cameras in most of the rooms, and a super-stove that cooks meals by itself.

But the children that Rowan met at her interview turn out to be far different from who they actually are, and the house’s remote location and sinister history unnerve Rowan as they have the four previous nannies (there is even a poison garden on the grounds).  However, Rowan is hiding her own secrets, and when disaster strikes, finds herself accused of murder.




Gothic and creepy.  The title and the story are both a play on Henry James’ The Turn of the Screw, set in a “smart” house instead of a haunted house.  This would be a great spooky read for the Halloween season.

Many thanks to NetGalley and the publisher for providing an e-ARC in return for a review.