horror
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The lights are low, the windâs whispering against the windows, and the night smells like secrets. Itâs Frightful Friday, which means itâs time to feed that craving for the uncanny â tales that bite back, stories that leave fingerprints on your mind long after you close the cover. đ¸ď¸ Catherine House by Elisabeth Thomas A
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Rating: â â â ââ Some books whisper dread like a lullaby, and others scream it in your face with a bloody, toothy grin. Nothing But Blackened Teeth tries to do bothâand in some ways, it succeeds. In others, it bites off more than it can chew. Cassandra Khaw serves up a novella soaked in Japanese folklore, drenched in dread,
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Rating: â â â â ½ âWhat they took from us, we bury. What they left behind, we burn.â Some books donât just ask to be readâthey demand it.They whisper from your nightstand, promise bruises and revelations, and leave you gasping in the dark. Kristi DeMeesterâs Dark Sisters is exactly that kind of novelâa fevered, feral hymn to womanhood,
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Welcome back to Freaky Friday, where we celebrate the chilling, the twisted, and the absolutely unhinged. If you’re the kind of reader who says you want a cozy weekend read but ends up deep in a book full of murder, monsters, or morally questionable decisionsâthis oneâs for you. Here are five books that legitimately made
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There are some books that make you question everything around youâlike, say, that weird patch of fungus growing on your back porch. T. Kingfisherâs What Moves the Dead is one of those books. A retelling of Edgar Allan Poeâs The Fall of the House of Usher, this novella takes everything unsettling about the original and
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Collin Armstrongâs Polybius is an enthralling debut novel that blends 1980s nostalgia with supernatural horror. Drawing on the urban legend of the mysterious arcade game rumored to induce bizarre effects, Armstrong crafts a story that is part Stranger Things, part The Walking Dead. Set in the quiet coastal town of Tasker Bay, the narrative follows