
Those Across the River by Christopher Buehlman
Haunted by memories of the Great War, failed academic Frank Nichols and his wife have arrived in the sleepy Georgia town of Whitbrow, where Frank hopes to write a history of his family’s old estate—the Savoyard Plantation—and the horrors that occurred there. At first their new life seems to be everything they wanted. But under the facade of summer socials and small-town charm, there is an unspoken dread that the townsfolk have lived with for generations. A presence that demands sacrifice. It comes from the shadowy woods across the river, where the ruins of the Savoyard Plantation still stand. Where a long-smoldering debt of blood has never been forgotten.
Where it has been waiting for Frank Nichols…(amazon.com)
Maura, Trussville


Harvest Home by Thomas Tryon
Tired of the rat race in New York City, artist Nick Constantine decides that he and his wife and daughter need to consider moving to the country. On a drive one afternoon they discover the small New England town of Cornwall Coombe. The town offers everything Nick has been dreaming about: a house dating from the 1700s for a reasonable price, gorgeous scenery, a close-knit community of down to earth neighbors. What Nick doesn’t yet realize is just how “down to earth” these people are. He gradually becomes aware that this is a town with a secret, one that everyone except him seems to know. There are oblique references to “what no man may know nor woman tell” and it is somehow connected with the upcoming festival of Harvest Home. Unable to restrain his curiosity—and in spite of his fears—Nick is determined to discover the secret behind Harvest Home. And . . . he does. This is a classic example of the “town with a dark secret” horror novel, and there was also a TV miniseries called The Dark Secret of Harvest Home, featuring Bette Davis as the Widow Fortune. A miniseries is the perfect format for a story like this with its slowly accumulating clues and gathering sense of dread.

Burnt Offerings by Robert Marasco
There should be an entire sub-genre of horror novels called “Escape from (insert large city of your choice, but it’s usually New York).” In Burnt Offerings, Ben and Marian Rolfe are sick of the noise, heat, and lack of privacy in their New York apartment and think that even a couple of months of a country vacation would do them a lot of good. Marian locates a country house that is billed as possibly being “reasonable—for the right people.” The Rolfes take their son and go to investigate. What they find is beyond Marian’s wildest dreams. The Allardyce estate is huge, a bit dilapidated, but filled with Waterford crystal and Sheraton furniture and art treasures and fine china . . . all decorative items that she loves. Her husband has some reservations about the place but they eventually agree that the rent is amazingly low and they sign the two-month lease, including the agreement that they will look after and prepare food for the mysterious Mrs. Allardyce who keeps to her own rooms. Slowly but surely, the atmosphere of the house breaks apart the family’s relationships and lays a claim on them that will definitely NOT end when their two months of vacation are over. There are many tropes here that would set off the alarm bells for experienced horror readers, but Marasco published Burnt Offerings right around the beginning of Stephen King’s career. At that time, horror novels occupied a lot less space on the bookstore shelves and many of the fixtures of the modern horror novel were fresh and new. Burnt Offerings still packs a wallop after all these years and remains a powerful example of the saying that when something seems too good to be true . . . it probably is.

Curfew by Phil Rickman
Standing on the border between England and Wales, the small village of Crybbe has a centuries-long tradition of ringing a special curfew every night. And they do mean every night. This is part of the rituals that are meant to keep an ancient evil in check, but there are signs that the evil is about to make a comeback. The village is the convergence point for a series of ley lines that channel supernatural energy, and when an ignorant millionaire declares Crybbe the perfect site for a facility to research the occult and paranormal, the stage is set for the dark magic of Crybbe to manifest. Creepy and atmospheric, Curfew is for the horror fan who enjoys the “slow burn” novel that gradually builds to an explosive finale, and this tale is one more convincing reason to stay OUT of small towns with dark secrets. It’s a long but satisfying read.

The Nell West/Michael Flint haunted house mysteries by Sarah Rayne
Sarah’s haunted house series, featuring the Oxford don, Michael Flint and the antiques dealer, Nell West, has received high praise from the critics, and the books have been described as ‘eruditely eerie’. There are six novels in the series, and although they can be read individually, it’s probably a good idea to start with book one, Property of a Lady.
“Rayne perfects the craft of deftly chosen details, simmering suspense and chilling surprises, all woven into a quiet, elegant narrative.” Kirkus (sarahrayne.co.uk)

Property of a Lady
A house with a sinister past – and a grisly power - When Michael Flint is asked by American friends to look over an old Shropshire house they have unexpectedly inherited, he is reluctant to leave the quiet of his Oxford study. But when he sees Charect House, its uncanny echoes from the past fascinate him – even though it has such a sinister reputation that no one has lived there for almost a century. But it’s not until Michael meets the young widow, Nell West, that the menace within the house wakes . . . (amazon.com)

The Sin Eater
The sins of the past break through to the present in this chilling tale of supernatural suspense. - When Benedict Doyle finds himself the owner of his great-grandfather’s North London house, it stirs memories of his time there as a frightened eight-year-old and the strange glimpses that revealed the darkness in his family’s past, through which runs the grisly thread of an old legend about a chess set believed to possess a dark power. And when Michael Flint, meeting Benedict in Oxford, starts to research his story, chilling facts begin to emerge – facts that suggest the old legend contains a disturbing reality. Could the chess set’s malevolence be reaching out to the present? (amazon.com)

The Silence
Antiques dealer Nell West is valuing the contents of her late husband Brad’s childhood home, Stilter House. Set on the remote Derbyshire Peaks, there was once a much older property there, in which the notorious Isobel Acton committed a vicious crime. Warned against visiting the house by an elderly aunt of Brad’s, Nell hears mysterious piano music soon after her arrival. It becomes clear that the music is tangled with Isobel Acton’s macabre fate more than a hundred years earlier. A fate whose consequences still menace the present. (amazon.com)

The Whispering
Fosse House, home of the reclusive Luisa Gilmore, harbours curious secrets - secrets that stretch back almost a century, to the ill-fated Palestrina Choir in its remote Belgian convent.
When Oxford don Michael Flint travels to the house to trace the origins of the long-dead Choir, he is at once aware of the house's eerie menace. Who is the shadowy young man who lurks in the grounds, and why does his exact likeness appear in a sketch from 1917? What is the strange whispering that echoes through the corridors? And why is Luisa so afraid when a storm makes it necessary for Michael to spend the night inside the house?
Back in Oxford, when Nell West uncovers the story of the infamous 1917 'Holzminden sketch' - the lost, legendary drawing from World War I - a dark fragment of the past begins to stir. A fragment that Michael, in the lonely old house, may not be able to resist. (amazon.com)

Deadlight Hall
A long-ago crime continues to menace the present in this spine-chilling tale of supernatural suspense.
When Michael Flint is asked by a colleague to investigate a reputedly haunted house, he is intrigued. Leo Rosendale’s childhood was blighted by a macabre tragedy in the grim Deadlight Hall – a tragedy that occurred towards the end of World War II, involving a set of twins who vanished. The fate of Sophie and Susannah Reiss was never discovered, and Leo has never been able to forget them.
When Michael, together with his fiancee Nell, begins to explore Deadlight Hall’s history, he discovers that in the 1880s another pair of sisters vanished from the house – and that there may also be much older and darker secrets lurking within its walls.
As Michael and Nell gradually peel back the sinister layers of the Hall’s unhappy past, they are unprepared for the eerie and threatening resonances they encounter – nor for the shocking truth of what took place there one long-ago midnight. (amazon.com)

The Bell Tower
A 400-year-old crime continues to menace the present in this spine-chilling tale of supernatural suspense.
When Nell West starts extending her Oxford antiques shop, she is not expecting to uncover strange fragments of its past: fragments that include a frightened message scribbled on old plasterwork, dated 1850 and referring to someone called Thaisa.
She also uncovers a mysterious link with a village on the Dorset coast – a village with an ancient bell tower and dark memories of a piece of music known locally as Thaisa’s Song. The sea is gradually encroaching on the derelict tower, but the old Glaum Bell still hangs in the lonely bell chamber and although it was silenced after an act of appalling brutality during the reign of Henry VIII, local people whisper that its chime is still occasionally heard.
As Nell and Michael Flint discover, the tower is mysteriously entangled with the story of Thaisa and a 400-year-old tragedy that has echoed down the centuries. (amazon.com)
Jack's arrival crushes Taro's hopes of a dashing Van Helsing-style hero. Instead of an invincible hunter, he gets Ichabod Crane. As the paranormal puzzles multiply and Jack begins to suggest the entity might not be a ghostly one, Taro adds a budding friendship with Jack to his pile of anxieties. It's a race to see whether Taro's poltergeist or his relationship with the obviously-not-ace Jack will reach maximum strangeness first. (amazon.com)
Samuel, Springville Road
Milo has had 9,995 chances so far and has just five more lives to earn a place in the cosmic soul. If he doesn’t make the cut, oblivion awaits. But all Milo really wants is to fall forever into the arms of Death. Or Suzie, as he calls her.
More than just Milo’s lover throughout his countless layovers in the Afterlife, Suzie is literally his reason for living—as he dives into one new existence after another, praying for the day he’ll never have to leave her side again.
But Reincarnation Blues is more than a great love story: Every journey from cradle to grave offers Milo more pieces of the great cosmic puzzle—if only he can piece them together in time to finally understand what it means to be part of something bigger than infinity. As darkly enchanting as the works of Neil Gaiman and as wisely hilarious as Kurt Vonnegut’s, Michael Poore’s Reincarnation Blues is the story of everything that makes life profound, beautiful, absurd, and heartbreaking.
Because it’s more than Milo and Suzie’s story. It’s your story, too. (amazon.com)
Liz, Pinson

reviewed by Richard, BPL Fiction

Nick may be a lost soul but he's still a good cop, so he is hired to investigate the murder of a top governmental advisor's son. This flashback-addict becomes the one man who may be able to change the course of an entire nation turning away from the future to live in the past.
A provocative novel set in a future that seems scarily possible, Flashback proves why Dan Simmons is one of our most exciting and versatile writers. (amazon.com)
Jon, Avondale

Sarat Chestnut, born in Louisiana, is only six when the Second American Civil War breaks out in 2074. But even she knows that oil is outlawed, that Louisiana is half underwater, and that unmanned drones fill the sky. When her father is killed and her family is forced into Camp Patience for displaced persons, she begins to grow up shaped by her particular time and place. But not everyone at Camp Patience is who they claim to be. Eventually Sarat is befriended by a mysterious functionary, under whose influence she is turned into a deadly instrument of war. The decisions that she makes will have tremendous consequences not just for Sarat but for her family and her country, rippling through generations of strangers and kin alike.

Jon, Avondale



Mankind is no longer at the top of the food chain. Zombies have taken their place, and nothing can stop them. Is this the end of humanity? Perhaps, but for some it is only the beginning.
Six billion living corpses are all that remains of civilization. Among the few survivors is Sam Coleman, a man who owes his salvation to Smith & Wesson and a little luck. Fleeing Seattle at the onset of the zombie outbreak, he was forced to leave his daughter behind. Yet now that silence has fallen over the city, he believes that she may still be alive. And his conscience serves up a constant reminder that to be human in this grim world is to have hope—and to keep fighting. (amazon.com)

Artemis thinks he has them right where he wants them but then they stop playing by the rules. (amazon.com)


…Unless you do. Albert Etheridge, a boy who disappeared into the Boundary in 1914, suddenly returns--without having aged a day and with no memory of the past hundred years. Then the Boundary starts creeping closer to the town, threatening to consume everyone within. Albert and the girls look for ways to stop the encroaching boundary, coming across an ancient Scottish spell that requires magic, a quest, and a sacrifice. (amazon.com)

Liz, Pinson


When the ozone layer opened and the sun relentlessly scorched the land, there was nothing left but to hope. Mathew Harrison had always heard of a better life as close as Birmingham, only thirty-five miles away—zones of blue sky, wet grass, and clean breathable air. But to him it’s a myth, a place guarded by soldiers, off limits to all but the lucky few. Meanwhile Mat works alongside his father, mining only the red clay that the once fertile Alabama soil can offer.
Now, with the killing deserts on the move again and the woman he loves on a Greyhound heading north, Mat has a travel visa and every reason to leave. But his roots in this lifeless soil inexplicably hold him firmly to the past. Torn between hope and resignation, with time running out, Mat must make a fateful choice between a new life and the one that isn’t ready to let him go. (amazon.com)