Kate’s Review: “In Deadly Company”

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Book: “In Deadly Company” by L.S. Stratton

Publishing Info: Union Square & Co, September 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publicist

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: A year after the blowout birthday celebration she organized accidentally ended in the death of her nightmare, one-percenter boss, Xander Chambers, Nicole Underwood thought she was setting the public record straight by agreeing to consult on a feature film based on her story. But on the set in LA, she watches in frustration as her experiences are persistently sidelined by inappropriate casting and frequent, bizarre script changes.
 
Nicole is haunted by the events of that fateful house party and visions of her now deceased boss. Xander had been unfit to lead the company his mother—famed entrepreneur Bridget Chambers—had founded and built to Fortune 500 status until her untimely death in a car accident several months prior. After being Bridget’s favorite assistant, Nicole had honored her mentor by staying on to keep Xander organized and on task despite his relentless partying. When he wanted her to plan his wild bash, Nicole saw a chance to probe the people closest to the Chambers family and learn if Bridget’s crash was truly a simple tragedy. But Nicole, who just wanted to be the best assistant possible, could not have foreseen the terrible consequences of her actions.

Review: Thank you to Sparkpoint Studio for sending me an ARC of this novel!

If a book comes at me and promises to have a “White Lotus” vibe to it I am probably going to be interested regardless, as that show is such a (not so) guilty pleasure for me. There’s something tantalizing for me about nasty wealthy people being shown as nasty with fun bits of dark humor AND the perspectives of the less wealthy having to deal with their bullshit. So it’s probably not shocking that when I was offered “In Deadly Company” by L. S. Stratton, which centers on an assistant of a notoriously awful billionaire reeling from a weekend that ends in multiple deaths, I was like ‘oh yes please’.

The plot is straightforward and very twisty, with two different perspective times and multiple perspective characters (though some are more prominent than others). Our main character is Nicole (or Nikki), the former assistant to famous billionaire Xander Chambers. She had been the assistant to his mother Bridget, but when Bridget died in a car accident she was kept on my Xander, who was far more crass and far less outwardly magnanimous. We have a first person POV in the present day, where she’s acting as a consultant on a film about a deadly weekend during Xander’s birthday celebration that happened a year prior. We also have third person POVs back to the weekend of the birthday bash, with Nicole and a couple other characters serving as the perspectives. I liked the way that Stratton used these two timelines, as it gives us a way to look at some very personal fallout for Nicole in the present day while also giving us hints beyond her scope during the birthday weekend. Nicole is a VERY enjoyably protagonist, as not only is she one of the few likable people in the book, she is also funny and sardonic and very easy to root for, whether that’s because of the crappy behavior of her employer and his terrible friends that she has to run damage control for, or the saccharine and very inauthentic movie production that she has been roped into in hopes of setting the record straight (while having to deal with colorism, misogynoir, and the general misrepresentation in the pursuit of a narrative that Hollywood is known for).

As a mystery, it had a lot of pretty well set up twists and turns. I could call a few of them here and there, but there were a couple that generally blew me away. Stratton has a dubious (in a good way) list of suspects, all of whom are believable to be killers or at least malevolent BECAUSE they are all such shifty and careless people, and if that doesn’t sum up the billionaire class I don’t know what does. Nicole’s interactions with them elicit both dark satire as well as ugly realities. I will say that I didn’t buy into the romance between Nicole and Jeremiah as much, but that’s not because of either of the characters. Like I said above I really liked Nicole, and Jeremiah was a solid ‘outsider’ perspective to give us more clues that Nicole wouldn’t necessarily be privy to when he did have his perspective points. But I thought that the romance between them could have had a bit more exploration and depth as opposed to the re-introduced whirlwind with so many other things happening in such a short period of time. But again, that’s a minor quibble in a story I generally enjoyed!

Ultimately I enjoyed “In Deadly Company” as it points out the greed and sociopathy of billionaires (both in the corporate and entertainment world) all wrapped up in a fast paced whodunnit. Definitely an enjoyable thriller!

Rating 8: A fun murder mystery with under-appreciated workers and conniving elites, “In Deadly Company” was a fast read that had me surprised consistently.

Reader’s Advisory:

“In Deadly Company” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of now, but it would fit in on “Damn These Rich People!”.

Kate’s Review: “LOONEY!”

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Book: “LOONEY!” by Stephen Kozeniewski & Gavin Dillinger

Publishing Info: French Press Publishing, April 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ebook from the publisher

Where You Can Get This Book: Amazon

Book Description: When beloved cartoon characters come crawling out of her TV, army recruiter Gabriella Harman expects a zany romp instead of the hellish nightmare that follows.

One night, haunted by her memories of Iraq, Gabriella downs a stomachful of pills and booze. When her favorite cartoon characters, the Kooky Toons, start crawling out of the TV, she assumes she is hallucinating.

But soon Gabriella finds herself locked in a battle of wits and wills with Herman Hyrax, the world-famous, wise-cracking mascot of the Kooky Korporation. Herman is more than just a stinker, though. He may be a monster, a demon, a god, or something entirely more unwholesome.

Is Gabriella’s descent into a world of cartoonish violence and psychological torment real? Or has she simply gone

LOONEY!?

Review: Thank you to French Press Publishing for sending me a copy of this book!

When I was a kid I loved the movie “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?”. I remember watching it for the first time when I was in early grade school at a friend’s house, and thinking it was very funny (mind you I missed a GOOD majority of the jokes, especially the sexual ones), but also TERRIFYING as Judge Doom melted a toon shoe in a big ol’ barrel of Dip. And then revealed himself as a murderous toon and went fully HAM on Bob Hoskins. It was the first time I had thought about the absurd over the top violence of the old ‘Looney Tunes” cartoons and how in real life that kind of violence would be horrifying. I kept thinking about “Roger Rabbit” while reading “LOONEY!” by Stephen Kozeniewski and Gavin Dillinger, where a beloved Bugs Bunny-esque cartoon icon is revealed to actually be an otherworldly deity that craves violence and chaos, and has used cartoon fame to spread his word, and can only be stopped by a traumatized war veteran.

It’s a little different from a traumatized P.I., but it hits the same (also, this is a safe space, as an elder millennial all grown up I find myself oddly attracted to Eddie Valiant?) (source).

“LOONEY!” is written like a chaotic and tripped up love letter to “Looney Tunes” and old school Disney shorts soaked in a bit of blood and dark fantasy, and it’s so creative it generally works. Our primary antagonist is Herman Hyrax, a violent and maniacal entity that manipulated a cartoonist promising him fame and fortune, but then used his fame to try and create a cult following of fans to implement his bloodthirsty needs. Enter Gabriella, a war veteran with PTSD who finds herself face to face with Herman Hyrax and other characters from the “Kooky Toons” shows, but in real life, sowing discord while other thought to be cartoons try to stop him. As I said, it feels like “Roger Rabbit” if it was far more violent and gory. It’s such a creative idea, and I genuinely love the concept of a Bugs Bunny kind of icon actually being something malevolent and dangerous, hiding behind a charismatic persona of a cartoon character. I will say that some of it dragged on a bit, and there may have been a few too many side characters that were also deities masquerading as cartoons, but in terms of fun and over the top horror moments it hit the mark pretty well.

I also appreciated how the book kind of acknowledges that these old time cartoons, while filled with lots of warm and fuzzy nostalgia, had some pretty problematic elements to them just based on the time frame in which it was taking inspiration from. I remember having old Bugs Bunny cartoons on a VHS tape that my grandmother gave me (it was almost assuredly a bootleg of some sort) that had some WILDLY racist bits in it, which my parents were sure to shut down when they saw just what it was I was watching, and there are similar moments in the lore of Herman Hyrax and his other ‘kooky’ compatriots. And even a reference to WWII propaganda shorts much like the ones so many cartoon companies were making at the time. I felt like the book did a good honest job of capturing the vibes of the cartoons of this era, damaging bits and all (I also really enjoyed having the bits of screenplays from some of the episodes and seeing Herman become more and more unhinged with studio notes written in).

Overall, “LOONEY!” is a creative horror story that I found entertaining. If you like kind of weird and somewhat meta horror, this could be a good fit.

Rating 7: Very creative and like a demonic iteration of “Who Framed Roger Rabbit?”, “LOONEY!” has some wild horror bits and a nostalgia for old time cartoons (while acknowledging the baggage that came with them).

Reader’s Advisory:

“LOONEY!” isn’t on any Goodreads lists yet, but it did make me want to re-watch “Roger Rabbit”.

Kate’s Review: “The Possession of Alba Díaz”

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Book: “The Possession of Alba Díaz” by Isabel Cañas

Publishing Info: Berkley, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: When a demonic presence awakens deep in a Mexican silver mine, the young woman it seizes must turn to the one man she shouldn’t trust… from bestselling author Isabel Cañas.

In 1765, plague sweeps through Zacatecas. Alba flees with her wealthy merchant parents and fiancé, Carlos, to his family’s isolated mine for refuge. But safety proves fleeting as other dangers soon bare their teeth: Alba begins suffering from strange hallucinations, sleepwalking, and violent convulsions. She senses something cold lurking beneath her skin. Something angry. Something wrong.

Elías, haunted by a troubled past, came to the New World to make his fortune and escape his family’s legacy of greed. Alba, as his cousin’s betrothed, is none of his business. Which is of course why he can’t help but notice her every time she enters a room or the growing tension between them… and why he notices her deteriorate when the demon’s thirst for blood grows stronger.

Review: Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an eARC of this book!

There are a few authors that when I see that they have a new book coming out I know it’s a must read. It spans across genres for me, and one of those authors is Isabel Cañas. She has written a haunted house story and a vampire story, both combined with a historical fiction setting in Mexico with some easy to root for romances to boot. Clearly when I saw she had a new book coming out, “The Possession of Alba Díaz”, I knew that I could probably expect those other two things along with a demonic possession backbone. Which was a okay by me, because she hasn’t let me down yet!

I really loved this book. I mean, I have basically loved all of Isabel Cañas’s books so it’s not a surprise. But as someone who doesn’t really care for possession horror, this one REALLY worked for me because Cañas thinks outside the box, which is exactly how I DO like possession horror. While it’s true that Alba is being victimized by a demon that has infiltrated her body and her consciousness, it is pretty clear as the story goes on that demons aren’t the biggest worries for a woman living in Mexico in the late 1700s, as there’s violent misogyny, a lack of any kind of self determination, and the horrors of the colonialism of Spain and the Catholic Church that prove to be far more pressing. I always appreciate it when historical stories in Latin America call out the horrors of the Spanish Conquest and the reverberations it had for the Indigenous groups that lived there before, and “The Possession of Alba Díaz” has ambitious priests and the threats of the Inquisition lurking all around our heroine who not only has a demon inside of her, but dares to want to have control of her life and independence from subservience. We also have hints as to what her fiancé would get out of this, and more hints about other ways that the Church has a cloud over a community of Indigenous people in ways that aren’t as obvious. It’s a fantastic re-examination of a genre that for so long has lauded the institution of the Catholic Church as the heroes of the story, and I’m so glad that more and more horror authors are approaching the tropes in new ways.

But I also really loved the love story between Alba and Elías, the outsider alchemist who people are wary of because of a dark past and perhaps some strange connections to non-traditional practices. Is it a little bit of a whirlwind insta love kind of romance? Yeah, for sure. But even so, I liked having both of their perspectives in the narrative so we could see a building passion between them as he wants to try to help her and she starts to realize that perhaps she CAN make room for romance in her hopes of finding a marriage match that won’t leave her abused or utterly powerless. There are also some moments that are pretty smolder-y, as while we don’t really get to see a lot of the smolder (after all, there are more pressing matters at hand), the build up and the chemistry between these two characters are palpable. Cañas really knows how to make me prioritize a romantic pairing even when demonic possession as religious oppression are nipping at said pairing’s heels.

“The Possession of Alba Díaz” is another winner from Isabel Cañas! She is three for three for me now, and I cannot wait to see where she goes next!

Rating 9: A possession story that sets its sights on not just the horrors of a demon within, but of colonialism and misogyny as well, “The Possession of Alba Díaz” is another historical horror gem from Isabel Cañas!

Reader’s Advisory:

“The Possession of Alba Díaz” is included on the Goodreads lists “Mexican Gothic”, and “Horror to Look Forward To in 2025”.

Kate’s Review: “How Bad Things Can Get”

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Book: “How Bad Things Can Get” by Darcy Coates

Publishing Info: Poisoned Pen Press, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publisher.

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: It was supposed to be the party of the century: miles of idyllic white sand beaches, lush jungle foliage…and a dark legend nobody dreamed might be all too true.

When an online influencer and several hundred of his most loyal fans land on Prosperity Island, the plan is simple: five days of elaborate games, drinking, and suntanned fun.

A week in paradise should have been a welcome respite. The only survivor of an infamous cult, Ruth wants nothing more than to keep her head down and not draw attention. She’s spent decades outrunning her blood-soaked childhood, and her identity is a closely held secret.

But then the true history of the island is revealed…along with its sinister connection to Ruth’s past. As guests go missing and games turn deadly, Ruth and the rest of the attendees are forced to question whether they’ve really been invited to paradise…or whether something much darker―and far bloodier―is waiting for them just beyond the bonfire’s light.

Review: Thank you to Poisoned Pen Press for sending me an ARC of this novel!

I kind of dropped the ball at the beginning of August when I was parsing out my Highlights for the month. Don’t misunderstand me, I was absolutely amped by all of the books on the list, and they were all good choices. But I completely forgot about the newest horror novel from one of my favorite horror authors Darcy Coates!! Coates is must read for me, and her new book “How Bad Things Can Get” was DEFINITELY a highly anticipated book for the entire YEAR, not just August! Oh well, it is what it is. And besides, highlight or not, I am here to tell you that once again I adore Coates and I adored this book. And how could I not? It has cults, gore, feckless billionaires, and influencer culture all trapped on a tropical island!

It’s like it was written with me in mind! (source)

Coates takes her sweet time with “How Bad Things Can Get”, and I really liked having her lay all the groundwork for the surprises and horrors she had in store. We are following a couple of different threads in this book as a group of influencers and guests are invited to a private and secluded tropical island by Eton, a “Mr. Beast”-esque online influencer who has become a billionaire and has monetary prizes in store for his guests. Ruth is one of the guests with her boyfriend Zack, and she has a secret she is trying to hide from the rest of the world: she was the only survivor of a suicide cult called Petition. As she is trying to put the past behind her and start anew, this vacation is making her deeply nervous, and she feels like someone is keeping an eye on her. We also follow Petra, one of Eton’s most trusted employees, always there to tamp down scandal and to bolster positive news. We also follow the mysterious Logan, as he is looking for hints about what Eton is up to, and seems to be connecting the dots that something is wrong. At first I was worried it may be a bit much, but never fear, Coates knows what she is doing and as she sets the scene, we get a slow burn tension that hints at more cults, urban legends, and a tragedy that has haunted this island for generations. Ruth was the clear winner for me in terms of perspectives, as she is filled with pain and justified paranoia, but I felt like I wholly understood her and really got her background. And I felt for her when she was one of the few people realizing something was terribly wrong as the weekend and competition continues, but questions herself because of her trauma. I also enjoyed Petra, because following her meant that we could get at least a little insight into Eton without having to get a FULL look, which added to the mystery at hand of how much he knows and what he is hiding.

Coates knows her references, from Jonestown to Heaven’s Gate to Roanoke, and it all blends into a seriously nasty (in a good way) brew. It’s gory, it’s horrifying, and there were multiple moments where the imagery on the page completely jarred me and sent chills up my spine. The horror elements also feel a little like “Cannibal Holocaust”, though without the weird racist undertones or sexual violence that movie has. It’s relentless at times, but if you like some gross visceral horror it should be right up your alley. A lot of people have said it feels like Jonestown meets Fyrefest, and that’s a pretty good analogy that I am going to continue. And like I said, all of this is my catnip and I really, really loved it.

“How Bad Things Can Get” is a fun as hell and scary end of summer horror novel. This very well be my favorite of her books, and that’s some pretty stiff competition.

Rating 9: You got cults, you got a disingenuous billionaire, you got an influencer festival going full gorefest, and you got Darcy Coates. A perfect end of summer horror read!

Reader’s Advisory:

“How Bad Things Can Get” isn’t on many relevant Goodreads lists, but it would fit in on “Summer Horror Books”.

Kate’s Review: “A Spell to Wake the Dead”

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Book: “A Spell to Wake the Dead” by Nicole Lesperance

Publishing Info: G.P. Putnam’s Sons Books for Young Readers

Where Did I Get This Book: I received a hardcover from the publisher

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: Two teen girls must uncover the dark, occult secrets lurking in their Cape Cod town to solve a series of murders—and save themselves from the same fate—in this twisty, witchy thriller.

When Mazzy and her best friend Nora sneak down to the beach one moonlit night to cast a spell, they don’t expect to find a dead body. But as the tide rolls in, it carries the remains of a woman who is missing her hands and teeth.

The girls know they should leave the investigation to the police, but they can’t shake the weird, supernatural connection they feel with the dead woman. Using spellwork and divination, they set out to find answers of their own. But after they uncover a rash of local disappearances stretching back years—and both girls start having occult visions and hearing ghostly, whispering voices—Mazzy worries that she and Nora are in danger.

Then, Nora finds a second body. And a whispering voice is telling her where to find more. With everything spiraling, Mazzy needs to figure out who to trust and how to sever this supernatural connection—or she and Nora might be the next bodies to wash up on the beach.

Review: Thank you to Penguin Randomhouse for sending me a finished copy of this book!

We are approaching the end of August, and here in Minnesota the first big symbol of the end of summer is the Minnesota State Fair, which started a couple of days ago. Whenever it’s time for the fair, I know that means that Autumn is just around the corner, and my Fall loving self starts to get excited and emotional. It’s my very favorite time of year, where I steep in all the spooky and cozy and scary and witchy things. And just in time for the turning of the seasons is a very witchy and Autumnal feeling book, “A Spell to Wake the Dead” by Nicole Lesperance. Seriously, if you are jonesing for Autumn like I am, this is probably going to be the book for you, because it felt like the perfect read to kick off the upcoming Fall.

“A Spell to Wake the Dead” feels like “The Craft” meets “A Good Girl’s Guide to Murder”, as we have two dabbling in witchcraft teens Mazzy and Nora as our main focus, who find themselves in way over their heads when they stumble upon a body after casting a mysterious spell. The book grabbed me from the jump, with a creepy body, implied potential possession, and the hints of a witchcraft cult that dabbles in human sacrifice, all against the spooky and yet serene backdrop of Cape Cod. Lesperance knows how to set an eerie mood, and I could practically smell the sea salt and feel the ocean mists as I was reading the book. Oceanside witches aren’t as common as other witch tropes, so it was extra fun seeing Mazzy and Nora use the sea and its bounty in their spellwork and explorations. I also enjoyed seeing the more casual use of spellwork in this book, with Mazzy and Nora not just doing huge spells that lead to the finding of dead bodies and perhaps ghostly influences, but also references to anti-anxiety spells and more simple and practical uses for magic. It just helped make it feel like these are two teenage witches who are interested in spellwork in their every day lives, which made it feel more genuine.

As for the creepy stuff and the mystery at hand, it definitely reads like a YA story, which is definitely not a bad thing. It didn’t send shivers down my spine, but I did like the mystery as Mazzy and Nora are trying to figure out who killed ‘May’ (as Nora has been referring to the body they found thanks to a strange supernatural connection) and as they find MORE bodies and evidence of a witch cult. It had a good number of twists and turns, and while I was able to predict some things, other things were genuinely surprising to me as I was reading. The stakes felt like they were climbing at a well done rate, and while the end felt a little bit frazzled and chaotic in some ways, overall I thought that everything generally pays off. It’s not a terribly scary story, but if you want your Autumn reading to be more “Practical Magic” than “The Witch” this will scratch that itch.

“A Spell to Wake the Dead” is an enjoyable witchy tale, the perfect way to kick off Autumn. I’m ready to kick summer to the curb and this made my need for Fall all the more pressing.

Rating 7: A spooky and witchy tale that will properly kick off the Fall season, “A Spell to Wake the Dead” is fun and vibes filled YA dark fantasy.

Reader’s Advisory:

“A Spell to Wake the Dead” is included on the Goodreads list “YA Novels of 2025”.

Kate’s Review: “A Game in Yellow”

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Book: “A Game in Yellow” by Hailey Piper

Publishing Info: S&S/Saga Press, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: Euphoria meets Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke in this latest novel by the Bram Stoker Award–winning author Hailey Piper, following a couple whose search to spice up their sex life leads them down a path of madness.

A kink-fixated couple, Carmen and Blanca, have been in a rut. That is until Blanca discovers the enigmatic Smoke in an under-street drug den, who holds pages to a strange play, The King in Yellow. Read too much, and you’ll fall into madness. But read just a little and pull back, and it gives you the adrenaline rush of survivor’s euphoria, leading Carmen to fall into a game of lust at a nightmare’s edge.

As the line blurs between the world Carmen knows and the one that she visits after reading from the play, she begins to desire more time in this other world no matter what horrors she brings back with her.

Bram Stoker Award–winning author Hailey Piper masterfully blends horror, erotica, and psychological thriller in this captivating and chilling story.

Review: Thank you to NetGalley for sending me an eARC of this novel!

I hadn’t actually heard of “The King in Yellow”, a collection of short stories with a horror play at its center with the same name, until I had picked up Hailey Piper’s new erotic horror tale “A Game in Yellow”. I’m not sure how I missed it, as researching it more makes me feel like it would be something I’d enjoy, but this was certainly an interesting introduction with the backdrop of a queer BDSM couple falling under the erotic spell of a stranger with a creepy little play that can grant absolute pleasure or absolute madness. I’ve been meaning to read more Hailey Piper, and thought that this one sounded creepy and out there. Which was compelling to say that least.

Our protagonist is Carmen, a woman who is in love with her girlfriend Blanca but whose sexual appetites have stalled out, so much so that even their BDSM kink play isn’t doing it for her. But Blanca hooks them up with a mysterious woman named Smoke who has a mysterious play called “The King in Yellow” that makes the reader tread to the very edge of euphoric pleasure… though should the reader go too far they will fall into insanity. As Carmen reads more her urges become more insatiable and their sex life is saved, but obviously at what cost as things start to get more and more out of control in her life and her mind. This is a horror story, but it is also filled with a lot of eroticism and kink that didn’t really hold back. Piper is more than happy to put all of the sexual thriller elements on the page, and the kinkiness combines with the building dread in a way that makes the reader feel like the reading process could very well teeter into some kind of voyeuristic experience. Piper’s writing is gorgeous at times, even if it is unrelenting in some of the rawer and ‘uglier’ elements of this dangerous game that Carmen is playing as she chases the dragon.

As for the horror elements, this book is very, very strange and weird with so much anxiety as Carmen perhaps slowly descends into madness. I do love a good ‘is it something supernatural or just someone losing their mind?’ trope, and Piper is very clever with how she ever so deliberately takes her time as Carmen spirals and becomes more paranoid as well as more insatiable for the pages of “The King in Yellow”. I will say that I did find the tension building to be effective, but do wish that we had gotten to the really weird and nutty ending a bit faster, or at least had more in your face nuttiness as the story led up to it. I’m not sure if this would have been different had I been familiar with the source material, but as it was I felt like I was waiting a bit for the fireworks factory to finally show up. That being said, the ending was INCREDIBLE, so that basically makes up for any criticisms about the pacing up until that point. Piper goes out with a bang with this one and I was left gobsmacked.

“A Game in Yellow” is off putting and weird. I think that if you are a little wary of kink or eroticism it may not be a good fit, but if you have an open mind and like stressful and beautifully written high strangeness horror it may be a good one to check out.

Rating 7: A deeply weird erotic horror story that drips with strangeness, “A Game in Yellow” is kinky and tension filled.

Reader’s Advisory:

“A Game in Yellow” is included on the Goodreads list “Queer Releases August 2025”.

Kate’s Review: “This Place Kills Me”

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Book: “This Place Kills Me” by Mariko Tamaki & Nicole Goux (Ill.)

Publishing Info: Abrams Fanfare, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publisher at ALAAC25

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: At Wilberton Academy, few students are more revered than the members of the elite Wilberton Theatrical Society—a.k.a. the WTS—and no one represents that exclusive club better than Elizabeth Woodward. Breathtakingly beautiful, beloved by all, and a talented thespian, it’s no surprise she’s starring as Juliet in the WTS’s performance of Shakespeare’s classic tragedy. But when she’s found dead the morning after opening night, the whole school is thrown into chaos.

Transfer student Abby Kita was one of the last people to see Elizabeth alive, and when local authorities deem the it-girl’s death a suicide, Abby’s not convinced. She’s sure there’s more to Wilburton and the WTS than meets the eye. As she gets tangled in prep school intrigues, Abby quickly realizes that Elizabeth was keeping secrets. Was one of those secrets worth killing for?

Told in comics, letters, diary entries, and news articles, This Place Kills Me is a page-turning whodunnit from award-winning writer Mariko Tamaki and acclaimed illustrator Nicole Goux that will have readers on the edge of their seats and begging for an encore.

Review: Thank you to Abrams Fanfare for providing me with an ARC at ALAAC25!

As someone who was a bit of an outcast in high school, stories about outsiders dealing with their outsider status appeal to me on a personal level. Along with that, I do love a good thriller and mystery. “This Place Kills Me” by Mariko Tamaki scratches both of those itches when it comes to thematic elements, and when I saw that it was going to be available at ALAAC25 I really wanted to get it. Finding out that there were also theater elements, boarding school dramatics, and queer themes to boot just hyped me up more! I’ve always enjoyed Mariko Tamaki’s contemporary books so I was quite interested in seeing what would be done with a thriller.

I really liked Abby as our main character, as she is a very relatable outsider who can’t seem to find her way to fit in at this prestigious all girl’s school, and who has some baggage toe carry with her due to rumors and unfair perceptions. I fully believed her as an amateur detective who wants to get to the bottom of her classmate’s unexpected death, especially when she uncovers some clues that make it seem like Elizabeth may have been hiding something. Tamaki is very deliberate in revealing clues through the eyes of Abby, and as she investigates and starts to find some of the more sordid and controversial secrets at Wilberton, she makes new enemies of fellow classmates, but also finds a potential ally in her roommate Claire, who has been pretty aloof bordering and hostile up until this point. I kind of saw some of the layers of the mystery early in the book, but that didn’t make it any less enjoyable. I was invested in seeing how Abby eventually figured things out for herself, and the coming of age that comes with learning about some dark and unfair truths about the world we live in.

But the thing that I found most resonant about this story, like many of Tamaki’s stories in the past, is how real and bittersweet and painful the coming of age aspect was in this story, and not just for Abby. But mostly Abby. This book takes place in the early 1990s, and Abby is a queer teen who has found herself ostracized and demonized because of her queerness and those around her being unable to understand or accept it. Tamaki taps into the loneliness and the isolation, and the way that having to hide oneself can be so damaging to a teenager (or anyone, really) going through some really difficult things. This book has some truly bittersweet and pathos filled moments, letting these feelings linger and speak for themselves even with a dark mystery at the forefront. But again, Tamaki has always been great with these kinds of stories, and this one continues the streak.

And finally, I enjoyed the artwork by Nicole Goux. Full disclosure, my ARC of this book was in black and white and the finished product will have some color, but even without that I still enjoyed the style.

(source)

“This Place Kills Me” is another great book about difficult subjects by Mariko Tamaki. Definitely recommended!

Rating 8: A disturbing mystery, a secretive girls school, and a bittersweet coming of age tale combine to make a solid story from Mariko Tamaki.

Reader’s Advisory:

“This Place Kills Me” isn’t on any Goodreads lists as of yet, but it would fit in on “Boarding School Mysteries”.

Kate’s Review: “Kill Beth”

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Book: “Kill Beth” by Jon Cohn

Publishing Info: Deadbolt Books, June 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eBook from the publicist.

Where You Can Get This Book: Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: After a horrific incident fifteen years ago, theater director Mike O’Brien never planned to return to Seattle. But when his estranged best friend sends him a script he can’t ignore, Mike finds himself back in the city with a spotlight on his troubled past.

As rehearsals begin, so do the nightmares. Strange figures keep him up at night, the production is plagued by one horrific accident after another, and everywhere he goes he can’t help but see the same message: Kill Beth. The strange thing is, Mike doesn’t know anyone named Beth, or how he could ever be capable of killing anyone?

When his world descends into chaos, Mike has to ask if he’s being haunted by his past, or if there is some sinister force working behind the curtain to derail his life.

Review: Thank you to Beverly Bambury Publicity for sending me an eBook of this novella!

For a few years of my life, I was a theater kid. It was just high school, but I was in drama for the entirety of it, acting in multiple plays each school year, even working on set building on Saturdays. I still have a medal that our one act play won in the Minnesota State High School Semi-Finals (we were robbed in the finals and that is all I will say). Once I got out of high school I left my theater stuff behind, but I associated with theater kids for a few years. So I do know some ins and outs of theater and how high pressure it can be (memories, MEMORIES of trying to do homework between moments where I had a scene during tech week rehearsals knowing I wasn’t getting home until 9pm or later). So while I’m not in theater now, I definitely felt the non-supernatural/main plot horrors of “Kill Beth” by Jon Cohn of a theater production revving up to put on a performance while its director may or may not be losing his marbles. That wasn’t the main point of the book, but boy did it resonate! Tech week is hell, even when there isn’t perhaps a ghost or a mental breakdown or whatever plaguing the captain of the ship!

“Kill Beth” is a shorter read (it is a novella after all) but it packs quite a wallop. We have our protagonist Mike returning the the Seattle theater scene after a fifteen year absence after a horrible tragedy that still unsettles him to this day, coaxed back by old friend Nate who has a great new script that Mike just has to direct. But as he starts the process of bringing this play to life, strange things begin happening. He has strange bouts of therapeutic writing that make little to no sense. His OCD symptoms start to ramp up. And he keeps hearing the directive ‘kill Beth’ in random places from random people. The big question of the book is whether this is him having a mental break, if this is something supernatural going on, or if there is someone in his life messing with him. Mike is frantic and on edge basically from the jump, and we see him slowly start to break down through first person narration and his therapeutic writing exercises he does for therapy, and it’s a solid combination that ratchets up the tension and makes effective use of its less than two hundred pages. I was genuinely wondering what was going on, and had many questions and theories that were never quite correct. Cohn weaves a very tangled web, but still manages to pull it all together before the curtain call, as it were. I was left guessing for sure.

I also enjoyed our cast of characters, as Cohn made me truly believe that they were a theater troupe that is trying to come together to bring a play to life in the face of multiple disasters, diva performers, and a perhaps fully unwell director. Heck, even Mike himself is an interesting character who I found to be unnerving as well as very sympathetic. A few of them also acted as pretty reliable red herrings, but that’s about all I will say about that.

“Kill Beth” is a fast and tense read, and I think that I need to go back and read more works by Jon Cohn. Very satisfying!

Rating 8: Surprising, suspenseful, and fully unhinged in a very positive way, “Kill Beth” is a stellar horror mystery with a deliciously unreliable narrator.

Reader’s Advisory:

“Kill Beth” is included on the Goodreads list “Best Unknown But Must Be Known Books”.

Kate’s Review: “What Hunger”

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Book: “What Hunger” by Catherine Dang

Publishing Info: Simon & Schuster, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an ARC from the publisher at ALAAC25.

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: A haunting coming-of-age tale following the daughter of Vietnamese immigrants, Ronny Nyugen, as she grapples with the weight of generational trauma while navigating the violent power of teenage girlhood, for fans of Jennifer’s Body and Little Fires Everywhere.

It’s the summer before high school, and Ronny Nguyen finds herself too young for work, too old for cartoons. Her days are spent in a small backyard, dozing off to trashy magazines on a plastic lawn chair. In stark contrast stands her brother Tommy, the pride and joy of their immigrant parents: a popular honor student destined to be the first in the family to attend college. The thought of Tommy leaving for college fills Ronny with dread, as she contemplates the quiet house she will be left alone in with her parents, Me and Ba.

Their parents rarely speak of their past in Vietnam, except through the lens of food. The family’s meals are a tapestry of cultural memory: thick spring rolls with slim and salty nem chua, and steaming bowls of pho tái with thin, delicate slices of blood-red beef. In the aftermath of the war, Me and Ba taught Ronny and Tommy that meat was a dangerous luxury, a symbol of survival that should never be taken for granted.

But when tragedy strikes, Ronny’s world is upended. Her sense of self and her understanding of her family are shattered. A few nights later, at her first high school party, a boy crosses the line, and Ronny is overtaken by a force larger than herself. This newfound power comes with an insatiable hunger for raw meat, a craving that is both a saving grace and a potential destroyer.

Review: Thank you to Simon and Schuster for giving me an ARC at ALAAC25!

I may not be looking in the right places, and maybe I don’t WANT to be seeking it out, thinking about it, but I haven’t read much cannibalism horror in all the years of doing this blog. I mean, there have been one or two, and it doesn’t really freak me out too badly as a sub-genre, but when I think of cannibalism horror tales I think of extreme horror or visceral horror, two kinds of horror I don’t really read much of. But who would have thought that my most recent cannibalism horror story would also be an exploration of the refugee experience, the barrier between immigrants and their first generation children, and violent misogyny perpetrated against teenage girls? Enter “What Hunger” by Catherine Dang, a book with an INCREDIBLE cover and a hard to ignore hook. Teenage girlhood can be hell, so why not throw in some consumption of human flesh on top of it?

The description of this book alludes to “Jennifer’s Body”, which is KIND OF correct? Ronny is definitely going through a lot and makes for a very sympathetic and easy to connect to protagonist. After she is sexually assaulted at a party (shortly after her older brother Tommy was killed in an accident that left her family in shambles), and after she bit her attacker and mangled his ear, she starts to have cravings and urges for raw meat, with a fixation on human flesh. She’s heard of stories of cannibalism, one even being connected to Vietnamese refugees desperate during a tragic escape attempt after the fall of Saigon, and as she deals with her trauma and grief, her rage translates into an urge and hunger she can’t seem to fight off. In that way it’s very “Jennifer’s Body”, but it stands on its own merits as well, exploring misogyny and sexual violence and revenge with a literal bite. It wasn’t so much scary as it was ‘good for her!’ as I was reading it, though admittedly some of the graphic descriptions of her chomping down on raw meat were gross as hell, but hey, that’s what we’re looking for, right? I do love feminine rage in a story and this one has oodles of it.

But aside from the cannibalism aspects, this is also a very tender tale about women, mothers and daughters, generational trauma, and refugees trying to make it in a new life when things seem incredibly stacked against them. Me and Ba both escaped from Vietnam after the end of the Vietnam War, though the road to America and safety was paved with violence, loss, sacrifice, and terrible choices that had to be made. We see how Me and Ba have been compartmentalizing their trauma and putting so much into their children, foisting expectations upon them that feel heavy and impossible, and after Tommy dies their grief is that much more complicated. I don’t want to spoil anything, but the relationship between Ronny and Me is the one that takes the fastest and strongest root, and while they don’t understand each other’s perspectives in some things, when they DO start to try and understand each other it makes for an eerie, but incredibly heartfelt relationship that brought tears to my eyes multiple times.

“What Hunger” is a uniquely emotional horror tale that unnerves the reader and has a lot of rage, but also has a powerful message about familial ties that come under strain. I quite enjoyed it.

Rating 9: Unnerving, filled with feminist rage, and a strong emotional center about mothers and daughters navigating generational trauma, “What Hunger” is a satisfying horror tale with a fair amount of pathos and heart.

Reader’s Advisory:

“What Hunger” is included on the Goodreads lists “She’s A Little Bit Unstable”, and “Horror To Look Forward To in 2025”.

Kate’s Review: “Lucky Day”

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Book: “Lucky Day” by Chuck Tingle

Publishing Info: Tor Nightfire, August 2025

Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley.

Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound

Book Description: Lucky Day is the newest novel of terror from Chuck Tingle, USA Today bestselling author of Bury Your Gays, where one woman must go up against the most horrifying concept of all: nothing.

Vera is a survivor of a global catastrophe known as the Low Probability Event, but she definitely isn’t thriving. Once a passionate professor of statistics, she no longer finds meaning in anything at all.

But when problematic government agent Layne knocks on her door, she’s the only one who can help him uncover the connection between deadly spates of absurdity and an improbably lucky casino. What’s happening in Vegas isn’t staying there, and the world is at risk of another disaster.

When it comes to Chuck Tingle, the only thing more terrifying than a serious horror novel is an absurd one

Review: Thank you to NetGalley for sending me an eARC of this novel!

This may be a bit of a strange revelation, but I take three annual trips a year, in general. The first is to the North Shore on Lake Superior, and my husband, kid, and I like being on the lake and just having chill family time. The second, of course, is ALA, no matter where that may lead. The third, and more out of character one, is going to Las Vegas every year for my husband’s birthday celebration. Las Vegas is a weird town to me. It’s overwhelming and very self indulgent, and I’ve seen things there that remind me while Randall Flagg in Stephen King’s “The Stand” chose it for his home base. But I generally have a good time because I can make it into whatever I want it to be (aka poolside in the shade, a fun couple of nights out with friends, and in bed by ten with my stack of books). But I was cackling a bit as I was reading “Lucky Day” by Chuck Tingle, as a good deal of the action takes place in Las Vegas, and Tingle doesn’t hold back on the absurdity and arrogance of this city. Oh, and there are also existential ruminations and some “Final Destination”-esque deaths, making for a strange and entertaining read!

Chuck Tingle continues to surprise me as an author. I had been expecting another horror novel, and while there are certainly horror-esque moments in this book (with lots of gore and outlandish slasher-y deaths), this to me seems more like a Science Fiction story than an outright horror tale. Usually when this kind of thing happens I find myself unable to connect with the book (Science Fiction, man, it’s not really my bag, baby), but in the case of “Lucky Day” Tingle mostly kept me interested and I felt like I was reading a story that could have been in “The X-Files”, and I meant that in the most complimentary way. I love the concept of messing and tweaking with luck and fate and having to have an offset in some way, with a huge and absolutely devastating “Low Probability Event” (LPE) leading to millions of deaths in the most improbable ways (fish falling from the sky causing accidents, a chimp running loose through a diner in Chicago and mauling people, spontaneous combustion, and more!) and a survivor and a shady Government agent teaming up to investigate. I love how Tingle tweaks and twists with the idea of manipulating luck through various inter-dimensional means, but then showing an offset and a cost that is INCREDIBLY high.

And I enjoyed the time spent in Vegas as our survivor Vera and Agent Layne start to investigate the head honchos of a casino that promises their gamblers the best luck on the Strip. It is such a nailing of Vegas and the glitz, the gilded glamour, and the way that people can convince themselves that they, too, can be lucky and everything will work out, without seeing or dealing with any consequences of it (what happens in Vegas, after all). Until you have to deal with it because disaster after disaster is happening. The portrayal of Denver, the head of the incredibly lucky casino, is spot on to what I would expect from a powerful player in a Vegas casino in the modern age, and her disingenuous nature and plastered on smile and charm made her easy to root against but was a fun characterization all the same. I also really liked Vera, our traumatized but still quite logic based statistician who lost so much in the LPE as she has to force herself to care again, and gets sucked more and more into probabilities, dimension rifts, and Nothingness versus Everything. Layne was a little more of a mixed bag for me character wise, and I felt like we got some reveals that didn’t make as much sense as they could have, but that’s a quibble when other parts of this were so strong.

So perhaps it was more Sci-Fi than I was anticipating, but I still found “Lucky Day” to be creative and enjoyable. I’m trying to get my husband to listen to the audiobook on the way to Vegas for his birthday in a few weeks.

Rating 8: Incredibly existential, out there, and creative, “Lucky Day” is the boldest story from Chuck Tingle yet!

Reader’s Advisory:

“Lucky Day” is included on the Goodreads lists “Bisexual Books of 2025”, and “2025 Adult Fantasy & Science Fiction”.