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Showing posts from February, 2026

They Call Her Regret by Channelle Desamours

Channelle Desamours’ They Call Her Regret is a darkly enchanting YA horror novel that blends spine-tingling suspense with the emotional weight of past trauma. The story follows Simone Washington, a high school senior whose love of Halloween parties and horror is both a passion and a coping mechanism for the secrets she hides. When her invitation-only eighteenth birthday bash at Doll’s Head Lake goes horribly wrong with the death of her best friend Kira, Simone is forced to confront the supernatural in the form of a local witch named Regret. The premise is compelling: Simone is offered a chance to erase all her regrets and save Kira’s life—but only if she can break the witch’s curse within fourteen days. Desamours crafts a tense, fast-moving narrative filled with eerie folklore, clever twists, and a darkly magical atmosphere that keeps readers hooked from start to finish. Simone is a relatable protagonist, her fears and guilt rendering her struggles emotionally resonant even amid the...

The Ravine by Maia Chance

 I went into The Ravine expecting something sharper—something that leaned harder into the horror it so clearly flirts with. Instead, what I found was a slow-burning psychological suspense novel that hovers right at the edge of darkness without ever quite plunging in. The premise is unsettling: a misty, wooded island; a husband returning to his childhood home; a luminous tradwife influencer neighbor who feels just slightly too polished to be real; and a ravine that may, or may not, hold evidence of something unspeakable. On paper, this had all the ingredients for full-bodied horror. In execution, it reads more horror-adjacent than outright terrifying. Harlow is a compelling narrator in her fragility. Her longing for pregnancy, her desire to cement her place in her marriage, and her creeping sense that something is wrong create a steady undercurrent of unease. The tension builds in whispers rather than screams. There are rumors of missing girls, hints of ritual, and the unsettli...

The Bone Queen by Will Shindler

 In The Bone Queen , Will Shindler delivers a moody, folklore-laced thriller set against the isolated shores of Athelsea. The novel follows Jenna, a single mother who travels from London to the remote village after her teenage daughter Chloe vanishes without explanation. The only clue? A ferry ticket to a place Jenna has never heard of. From the very first chapter, the atmosphere is thick with unease—coastal isolation, whispered legends, and a mother unraveling under the weight of fear. I’ll admit, I was initially taken aback. The opening chapter felt uncannily similar to my own novel, The Island . Similar enough that I actually pulled my book off the shelf and reread both openings—twice. Thankfully, while the setup echoes familiar territory, the story quickly veers into its own mythology. At the heart of the novel is the legend of the Bone Queen—a vengeful female figure spoken of in hushed tones. The lore surrounding her is structured in a way that feels very modern, almost rem...

Pendergast by Douglas Preston & Lincoln Child

It’s hard to believe that I was first introduced to the enigmatic Agent Aloysius X. L. Pendergast back in 1995 with the release of Relic. That novel was phenomenal—intelligent, atmospheric, and chilling in all the right ways - and I instantly began reading every book by the authors and waited expectantly for each new release. Life, as it tends to do, intervened, and I eventually fell behind. So when I discovered they had written an origin story for one of my all-time favorite characters, I was beyond thrilled. Pendergast takes us back to the very beginning. The novel opens with Special Agent Dwight Chambers at his lowest point. In six devastating months, he has lost both his partner and his wife. Returning to work in the New Orleans Field Office, grief-stricken and unmoored, he is assigned to mentor a peculiar new recruit: A.X.L. Pendergast. From the start, the dynamic between Chambers and the young Pendergast is electric. Chambers is grounded, wounded, and practical. Penderga...