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A Harvest of Furies by Hayden Casey reimagines ancient tragedy in the American heartland

The first thing that struck me about A Harvest of Furies by Hayden Casey was its ambition. This contemporary retelling of Aeschylus’s Oresteia brings ancient themes of guilt, vengeance, and divine punishment into a modern Midwestern setting—an inspired concept that could have easily collapsed under its own weight. Yet, for much of the novel, Casey manages to sustain that tension between the mythic and the mundane, between the haunted family home and the echoes of war that ripple through its walls.

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The story centers on siblings Orrie and Emma, whose family has been cursed for generations. When their father, Aggie, returns home from war a changed man, the fragile normalcy they’ve built begins to unravel. Secrets surface, deaths follow, and before long, the house itself seems alive with voices—echoes of both the past and the family’s own unraveling sanity.

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The Forest of Missing Girls by Nichelle Giraldes: A haunting story of magic, perfection, and the woods that watch us

Lia Gregg always feared the forest around her childhood home, a dark expanse whispered about in local legends and haunted by disappearances of girls like her. When a breakup forces her back into her family’s house, those fears take on a chilling immediacy: a teenage girl goes missing from their backyard, and Lia’s younger sister could be next. At first glance, The Forest of Missing Girls by Nichelle Giraldes seems like a straightforward thriller. But that expectation is misleading—and that’s both the book’s biggest marketing misstep and its hidden strength.

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The publisher’s description positions this as a standard thriller: a suspenseful story about a lurking danger in the woods, complete with disappearances and secrets. In reality, the story leans heavily into magical realism and science fiction, creating an experience far more complex and atmospheric than a typical thriller. The forest itself is a fully realized character—alive, watchful, and mysterious. Girls vanish and reappear across impossible distances, and the trees seem to hold their own consciousness, communicating with both the missing girls and those left behind.

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The Unworthy by Agustina Bazterrica: A haunting, lyrical descent into devotion and decay

From the author of Tender Is the Flesh comes another brutal yet mesmerizing vision of humanity undone. In The Unworthy, Agustina Bazterrica imagines a world consumed by climate collapse and desperation, where one woman survives inside a secretive religious order that thrives on submission and silence. From her isolated cell, she writes her story in scraps of ink, dirt, and blood—confessing, questioning, and unraveling as the walls of her faith begin to crack.

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This is horror not of jump scares, but of ideology and indoctrination. The convent’s rigid hierarchy—the Enlightened and the Unworthy—mirrors the broken world beyond its gates, one where water is scarce, and mercy even scarcer. When a new woman arrives and challenges what the narrator believes to be truth, the cracks widen. What emerges is a story about power, memory, and the price of obedience in a collapsing world.

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Listen by Sacha Bronwasser explores who gets seen—and who gets silenced

Sacha Bronwasser’s Listen is a quiet, unsettling novel that stares straight into the power imbalance between those who look and those who are looked at—and asks what happens when the powerless finally start to speak. Translated from Dutch, Listen unfolds slowly, like a photograph coming into focus, until the image becomes both vivid and painful.

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The novel moves between Paris and the Netherlands, between 1989 and 2015, tracing two women—Eloise and Marie—whose lives briefly overlap through the same family and the same Paris apartment. Both arrive as au pairs, both nearly invisible to the family they serve, and both find themselves noticed at last only when that attention becomes dangerous.

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The Missing Half by Ashley Flowers: A story of sisterhood, loss, and a twist that left me stunned

In The Missing Half, two women connected by tragedy team up to uncover the truth about their missing sisters—and what they find is far darker than either expected. Ashley Flowers, best known as the host of the Crime Junkie podcast, delivers another haunting mystery in The Missing Half, a New York Times bestseller that blends emotional depth with a compelling, small-town suspense plot.

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The story follows Nicole “Nic” Monroe, a twenty-four-year-old still reeling from the disappearance of her older sister, Kasey, seven years earlier. When Jenna Connor, whose own sister vanished under eerily similar circumstances, reaches out, the two women form an uneasy bond rooted in shared grief—and a mutual determination to find answers.

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Gothic horror and generational curses collide in House of Monstrous Women by Daphne Fama

Daphne Fama’s House of Monstrous Women is a lush and terrifying gothic horror novel set in 1986 Philippines, where revolution outside mirrors the quiet rebellion unfolding within a house that may as well be alive. Set against the backdrop of the People Power Revolution, this novel layers political upheaval with supernatural dread in a way that feels both intimate and epic.

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Radios hum with news from Manila as protests rise and a dictator’s hold begins to crumble—but inside the labyrinthine Ranoco home, another kind of battle is taking place. The connection between the two is unmistakable: both are revolutions built on desperation and the dream of escape. The hopelessness that Alejandro feels about the People Power movement echoes Hiraya’s belief that she can never escape the legacy of her cursed family.

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Blood, sisterhood, and sanity: Blood on Her Tongue by Johanna van Veen #spooktober

If you’re looking for a haunting, atmospheric read to carry you through the end of #spooktober, Johanna van Veen’s Blood on Her Tongue offers the perfect blend of gothic unease and creeping dread. Set in the Netherlands in 1887, this novel follows Lucy, whose twin sister Sarah has fallen into a disturbing illness that blurs the line between madness and possession. As Sarah’s behavior becomes more erratic—and more violent—Lucy must decide how far she’ll go to protect her sister, even as something monstrous seems to take hold of her.

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The story unfolds in shadow and candlelight, in grand halls filled with whispers and secrets. Van Veen’s prose feels appropriately decadent and claustrophobic, wrapping the reader in the same feverish confusion that grips Lucy. The decaying corpse unearthed on Sarah’s husband’s estate provides more than a physical mystery—it becomes a mirror for the moral rot beneath the surface of polite society, particularly the suffocating gender expectations that hem Lucy and Sarah in.

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Finding her voice: The Writing Room by Marcia Argueta Mickelson

In The Writing Room (releasing November 4, 2025), Marcia Argueta Mickelson delivers a powerful coming-of-age story about finding your voice, claiming your space, and learning that silence in the face of injustice is its own kind of complicity.

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Eighteen-year-old Maya has just graduated high school when her wealthy, self-satisfied father kicks her out of his New York City apartment to “make her own way.” With her mother living in Guatemala and her father’s emotional abuse still echoing in her head, Maya spends the summer sleeping on her friend Yoly’s couch while she works, writes, and counts the weeks until she can move into the dorms for college. Her life changes when she gains access to a shared workspace known as “the writing room,” a place that gives her both the structure and sense of community she’s been missing.

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When going home means facing the ghosts you tried to forget: Do Not Follow by Surbhi Bansal

Returning home after years away can feel like stepping back into a life you no longer recognize. In Do Not Follow by Surbhi Bansal, that homecoming forces one woman to confront the choices, expectations, and silences that have shaped her entire life.

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Seema, once a promising surgeon, is now a consignment store owner living far from the path her family imagined for her. When her father dies, she returns to Albany after seventeen years to help her mother sort through their family home. What follows is a deeply emotional story about grief, identity, and the unspoken costs of cultural and familial duty.

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Pam Kowalski is a Monster! by Sarah Langan — When memory lies and the world unravels

There’s something deliciously unsettling about realizing your memories might be wrong. Sarah Langan’s Pam Kowolski Is a Monster! turns that unease into a full-blown psychological and supernatural meltdown. This novella barrels through themes of memory, trauma, and rivalry with the manic energy of an apocalypse that might already be happening — or might only be in the mind of its unraveling narrator.

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Janet Chow’s life didn’t exactly pan out the way her classmates might have predicted back at Sewanhaka High. Once destined for greatness, she’s now middle-aged, adrift, and licking the wounds of a career in journalism that has long since crashed and burned. Then she spots her old nemesis — Pam Kowolski, the girl she used to despise — who has somehow transformed into “Madame Pamela,” America’s psychic sweetheart and doomsday influencer. Pam is rich, beautiful, and adored, while Janet is invisible. Convinced that Pam’s fame is built on lies, Janet sets out to expose her as a fraud. But digging into Pam’s past also means unearthing the pieces of her own history that she’s conveniently buried — and the deeper she digs, the more she starts to question what’s real, what’s remembered, and what’s imagined.

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