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Book: “Slasher Summer” by E.L. Chen
Publishing Info: Crown, June 2026
Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publisher at PLA 2026
Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound
Book Description: In this campy love letter to the slasher films of the 1980s, seven friends reunite for a weekend of fun—only to be hunted down by a cold-blooded killer. But the real horror is not being able to escape who you were in high school…
The sleepy town of Cedar Lake Falls is best known as the shooting location of the campy ’80s horror flick Slasher. In high school, preppy Patrick, jock Jason, cheerleader Tiffany, stoner Freddy, goth Jennifer, and nerdy Michael had played the cast of Slasher during midnight showings, with virginal Carrie as the Final Girl, of course.
Years later, the friends reunite at the remote cabin where Slasher was filmed. They’ve changed since high school—Patrick came out, Mikey bulked up, and, well, Freddy’s still stoned—and they’re looking forward to a weekend to catch up. But when night falls, and the eponymous masked killer is spotted, the reunion takes a deadly turn. The friends discover their tires deflated and the phone line disconnected, and soon they’re being stalked by a mysterious assailant. Is someone trying to make their Slasher experience as authentic as possible?
One thing is for sure. Before the night is over, they each will have to take on the role they thought they’d left behind.
Review: Thank you to Crown for handing out ARCs at PLA 2026!
It is NO secret that I absolutely adore horror movies. You almost always find some kind of horror or horror adjacent nonsense on my “Not Just Books” highlights every month, and I’m still very much a part of my Terror Tuesday movie club (though admittedly it’s more like once every two months now as opposed to every week now that the pandemic has wound down). I especially love slasher movies for their over the topness, and it’s a genre that you don’t really get as much in the book world, possibly because so much of it relies upon visual gore and nonsense. But that said I’m always on the lookout for slashery stories, so of COURSE E.L. Chen’s “Slasher Summer” was a must read for me. And it was such a fun ride! My slasher loving heart was singing! And it’s the perfect time of year for it!

This is such a fun love letter to slasher films. Chen knows the history of the genre, the important themes that the genre needs, and the character archetypes necessary for the genre. There are also Easter eggs dropped all over the place and references to other horror or horror adjacent movies, be it due to the characters being fans of horror movies, or just little nods in the narrative (for example, all of the characters having names derived from horror film villains). It all feels very meta and very tongue in cheek in some ways, but then when it wants to go hard on the slasher gore, it goes HARD. Yes there is a lot of humor as the story goes, but when the kills happen, they don’t hold back and they escalate in the way that you would expect from a slasher film. It’s not for the squeamish. And it definitely reads like a slasher movie plot, with each character fitting a role and each plot twist feeling right out of a movie. I could easily see this in my mind’s eye on a movie screen with my Terror Tuesday friends and I just vibing along with it.
BUT, it also has some really great deconstructions of the genre as well, playing with tropes that have become expected and turning the on their heads. Admittedly I can’t really go into too much detail without dropping some significant spoilers (which I don’t want to do), but I will try and talk about some that don’t feel particularly spoiler-y for me but make the point. The first is that one of our main protagonists who is incredibly much the ‘capable male hero’ is Patrick, who also happens to be a Black man who is a bit of a nerd and is obsessed with horror movies. In horror films, especially ones of the 80s and 90s, the trope of ‘the Black man always dies first’ was an unfortunate theme for a very long time. By making Patrick basically the expert on the genre who knows what to do and how to maneuver was a great subversion. Along with that, we have the queerness of both Patrick, who is an out gay man, and Jason, the stereotypical jock with the glossy blonde girlfriend, who is a closeted bisexual and who has a huge crush on Patrick (and thinks the feelings are not returned; BUT THEY ARE!). It’s no secret that ‘bury your gays’ has been another sad device in horror and thriller stories (and other stories too), as well as gay or queer people being villainous or mocking stereotypes. But in this they are just two guys pining for each other and it’s incredibly sweet and MAN was I rooting for them. It’s the things like this that really made this book pop. It’s a book that clearly loves the genre, but is also more than happy to critique it and improve upon it.
“Slasher Summer” is the PERFECT summer horror book, especially if you are a horror fan. I had a blast reading it.
Rating 8: A fun love letter to the slasher genre that not only perfectly pays tribute to slashers of the 80s, but also deconstructs old chestnuts in interesting ways!
Reader’s Advisory:
“Slasher Summer” is included on the Goodreads list “June 2026 Queer Releases”.



















