Summer Scares Resources

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Thursday, December 19, 2024

Emily Hughes' 2025 New Horror Books List is Now LIVE and Coming Soon, Emily, Robb, and I Talk About Our First Half Highlights

Sure 2024 still has a few days left, but you know you are already looking forward to what is coming in 2025. 

Emily Hughes has made her 2025 list of Horror titles available here. It includes books I have already reviewed. Please go there to see not only the list for next year, but also to find links to previous years' lists. Remember, you can use her annotated list from years' past to find a great, new to you, read.

And here is a teaser...later tonight Emily and I are going to record for Robb Olson's ARC Party. Just like last year we are doing our Horror preview episodes. Click here for the podcast we did for the first half of 2024, here for the one we did for the second half of 2024, and stay tuned for when Robb posts this new podcast looking at the first half of 2025. 

Below is the introduction to Emily's post but again, click here to see the full list. And get ready for some awesome scares coming in 2025. Or use the page to go find some books you missed from year's past.

2025’s New Horror Books


Welcome back, kind readers and weird little freaks! Once again I’m obsessively cataloguing all the year’s new horror fiction, for my benefit and yours. I really enjoy building and maintaining this list every year––it gives me an incredible birds’ eye view of the landscape of horror publishing, and I’m delighted it’s proven useful to so many of you as well.

My general philosophy here is genre-inclusive, not exclusive––I take a broad view of what counts as horror. Alongside traditional horror, here you’ll find all things gothic, dark, weird, and thrilling––and, hopefully, your next favorite scary book.

Looking for previous years’ lists, including the ones broken down by month? Those all live over here. Did I miss something? Let me know here.

Without further ado, here are all the new horror books coming in 2025, featuring an array of slashers, ghosts, vampires, cults, monsters both human and otherwise, and all manner of nebulous eldritch terrors. 
Please note that publication dates are subject to change – I’ll be updating the release dates below and adding new books as I hear of any changes, but publisher and retailer websites will always have the most up-to-date info.

Many titles publishing later in the year don’t have concrete release dates yet – I’ve listed those at the very bottom under “Date TBD” – and if the publisher or Bookshop don’t have a dedicated page for a book yet, I’ve linked to Goodreads or to the book announcement elsewhere. Descriptions below are adapted from the publisher’s synopsis. Books publishing in a given month that don’t have a specific date assigned yet are at the bottom of that month’s list.

Click here for the full list. 

Wednesday, December 18, 2024

Becky's 2024 Horror Book Highlights via The Lineup

I do a column for The Lineup 4x a year with December always scheduled to be a "Horror Book Highlights." I love doing this because both my editor (Lisa Quigley) and I want this NOT to be a traditional best list, rather I use this chance to look back at the trends I have seen in the year that just past. It is a fun exercise and allows me to highlight more titles than a traditional best list (like this one).

Go here to read the full article with graphics and links to more about each book on their site. Below, I have my draft which I turned in. It may have typos, but I want the authors and titles here on the blog for people to be able to search.

From the Haunted Stacks: 2024 Horror Book Highlights

A detailed look at Horror from 2024, from the “library world's horror maven.” 

By Becky Spratford | Published Dec 17, 2024

I know what many of you are thinking: Oh no, not another best list! But don’t worry, that is not what this is.

As I do each year here at The Lineup, I try to give you a more nuanced look at the year that was by walking you through some of the more interesting trends I have noticed accompanied by the example titles that illustrate them best.

But before we even begin, it is important to note one book that stands alone identifying its own trend, Horror for Weenies: Everything You Need to Know About the Film You Are Too Scared to Watch by Emily C. Hughes. Horror is hot right now and everyone wants to jump on the scary bandwagon, but not everyone is ready. This title allows anyone, no matter how big a scaredy-cat, to participate in the larger conversation around Horror, a conversation that  is happening just about everywhere. Hughes’ book has hit a nerve, even making it on the NPR “Books We Love” end of the year list of their favorite books. 

Now on to the trends I saw in 2024.

The Biggest Names Are Not Only Getting Bigger, They Are Getting Better

Over the last 5 years, Horror authors with names other than Stephen King have been making it onto the bestseller lists and/or gaining regular coverage in mainstream media. This year some of those authors had new novels. While that is not a surprise, what I did find noteworthy is that all of these authors churned out excellent works. Not resting on their laurels, these authors, who readers already know and trust, keep raising the bar for the entire genre. From the female vampire rage of So Thirsty by Rachel Harrison to Lovecraftian vengeance in the middle of a hurricane in House of Bone and Rain by Gabino Iglesias to Paul Tremblay’s deeply unsettling Horror Movie (which debuted on the NYT Bestseller list) to two novels by Stephen Graham Jones– the final installment in the Jade Daniels trilogy, The Indian of Angle Lake and a new take on the slasher story in I was a Teenaged Slasher. We also saw the return of Nick Cutter with the wild, terrifying and original wasp infested The Queen, Chuck Tingle proving his first mainstream novel was no fluke in Bury Your Gays, and Josh Malerman somehow managing to freak everyone out even more than he has with his previous excellent novels with a child narrator and the “Other Mommy” in her closet in Incidents Around The House.


These are the novels that set a high bar for Horror in 2024, and as these authors excelled they added new readers, many of whom didn’t consider themselves Horror readers.


But now? They may be hooked.


Women Rule The Best Debuts


That list above was very male heavy; a fact that was upsetting to me. That is until I looked at this year’s top debuts, and I breathed a sigh of relief. I always make a list of the best Horror debuts each year because debut authors serve as a map to see where the genre is going. This year, not only was I blown away by a larger number of debut novels (many were among my favorite reads of the year), but also, I was excited to see they were all written by women. Here are four of my favorite Horror debuts from 2024, and what a wide range of writing styles and scares they offer.


The Eyes are the Best Part by Monika Kim


Ji-Won is a first generation Korean-American, a college student who is sick of the fetishization of Asian women and wants to do something about it. She confidently leads readers through this expertly constructed story, earning sympathy even as readers begin to see they should not trust her. As the novel evolves from domestic drama to one filled with oppressive dread, the palpable anxiety evolves into repulsion and Ji-Won dares readers to avert their own eyes.


This Wretched Valley by Jenny Kiefer


March 2019, four 20 somethings enter the Kentucky woods on a mission to study and scale a never before seen rock formation, except, readers are told immediately, none of them made it out alive.Told from the point of view of each doomed character, and with time frames alternating between the story’s present, and the past, beginning in the 1700s when this land was first discovered, Kiefer masterfully crafts both vivid characters and a visceral place, a land rooted in evil, with a long history of a thirst for human blood.


Midnight Rooms by Donyae Coles


Orabella, a half Black orphan, lives under the care of her Uncle in 1840s England where she is hastily married off to the handsome, rich, and mysterious Elias Blakersby. Whisked off to the countryside and separated from everyone and everything she knows, Orabella is sent to a decaying house with shifting hallways, odd family gatherings, and dangerous secrets. Not your grandmother’s Gothic, Coles brilliantly takes recognizable tropes but adds modern sensibilities and original twists.


Sacrificial Animals by Kailee Pedersen


Nick returns home to the cruel father he left behind after a hard childhood in Nebraska upon hearing his dad is dying. Nick encourages his estranged brother, Joshua, disowned when he married Emilia, a woman of Chinese descent, to join him. Told from Nick’s point of view in 2 time frames– the present and the year he was 13– Pedersen presents a slow burn, supernatural horror tale, centering family, trauma, and revenge, with unease infused into every detail, which all building to an ending that will leave readers gasping with awe.


Novellas For All Readers

Novellas have been steadily gaining in popularity for a decade now, but previously, the market was dominated by one publisher– Tor.com. While they put out some great stories, the offerings were limited in scope. Now that readers have embraced the novellas as a standalone reading option, more publishers are taking a chance on the format which means there are amazing books for all of us to read. These four books, all under 200 pages, meant to be read in a sitting (or 2 max) showcase the breadth of excellent options available in the format, with not a single title coming from Tor.com


Cranberry Cove by Hailey Piper


Partners Connor and Emberly, the private security partners for a local crime boss,  are called to a “people eating” hotel to try to find out what happened to the boss’ son. The terror seeps through the walls and into the story as Piper employs all five senses to draw readers in and hold them rapt from beginning to end. Think of it as the Law and Order SVU and X-Files crossover episode you never knew you needed in your life.


Coup de GrĂ¢ce by Sofia Ajram


Vicken is on the Montreal subway with plans to get off at the last stop and throw himself in the river, ending his life. However, upon exiting the train, he finds himself trapped in a never ending labyrinth of corridors. As Vicken continues to wander, Ajram cleverly transforms what seems like a deceptively simple plot into a complex, moving and immersive contemplation of the very real horror of living with severe depression.A tale that is as brutal as it is beautiful, readers need to prepare to become emotionally invested in this one.


Eynhallow by Tim McGregor


Set on the very real uninhabited Scottish island of Eynhallow, McGregor uses its eerie history as fodder for his atmospheric and compelling retelling of Frankenstein. Told from the point of view of Agnes, in 1797, as her husband hires her out to help the rich, reclusive stranger (Victor Frankenstein) who has come to hide himself away from the world. As Agnes gets to know him better, the tension, unease, and danger build, sightings of a monster lurking in the darkness increase, and Frankenstein’s curse becomes Agnes’ burden.


Kill Your Darling by Clay McLeod Chapman


Glenn’s son Billy died 40 years ago, at the age of 15, the victim of a brutal murder. The case was never solved and Glenn’s grief has not ebbed at all. Glenn signs up for a writing class at the local library. Hoping to work through his pain and turn it into a book, but will that lead him even further into despair? An unflinching tale of grief, pain and obsession, that will leave readers gasping for air.


Not Your Parent’s Short Stories

This final trend was one I saw emerge in real time as I was working my way through my favorite reads of 2024, as I saw that many of my favorite short story collections and anthologies all took the well worn concept of a single volume full of stories and did something original or surprising with it.


Craft: Stories I Wrote for the Devil by Ananda Lima


One of my favorite reads in any genre this year, Lima presents a novel in stories that is exactly what it claims to be–  a collection of stories the main character wrote after meeting the Devil in her 20s and hooking up with him. The stories themselves, separated by interludes when the narrator and Devil check in with each other over her life, range from weird and creepy to surrealist and existentially terrifying. Captivating, alluring, and even a little illicit, this book makes for an extraordinary reading experience.


Fragile Anthology edited by Michael Allen Rose


An unsuspecting employee of a moving company is handling a box, when he notices that it moves on its own. What could be in there? Wonderland Award winning author Rose decided to let the 20-sided die decide, as he solicited 20 all new stories by authors well known (Brian Keene and Cynthia Pelayo) and up and coming and asked them each to answer the question. Readers are treated to tales from Horror to Bizarro to Science Fiction and more with each role of the die. What could have been a gimmick instead showcases how an original idea can make for one of the best and honestly, most enjoyable, anthologies of the year.


No One is Safe! By Philip Fracassi


Fracassi’s small press collection of 14 speculative stories, all underpinned with unease, feature fascinating characters in original situations working in tandem to present fascinating stories that explore topics such as filial love, AI, alien life, Hollywood, a bestselling book, a haunted house as the narrator of its own killing spree, and more. Thought provoking, imaginative, and stunning, Fracassi's stories stand out not only because of his range, but also because it is the rare collection without a miss– every story, start to finish- is not to miss.



This Skin Was Once Mine and Other Disturbances by Eric LaRocca


The fact that LaRocca is on another year end best list for his short fiction, is not a surprise in any way; however, the fact that he continues to find new ways to invoke a mixture of disgust and wonder as he presents stories filled with the pain, trauma, and violence at the center of our most intimate relationships, is remarkable. Too often Horror authors exploit depravity for cheap thrills, and yet LaRocca instead is able to use extreme horror to reveal the most universal truths. On a side note,the last scene of the last story may be the best ending to a collection I have ever experienced.


Click here to read the full article over on their site, with links to every title. Feel free to search any of these on Goodreads as well to find my reviews.

Come back tomorrow, when I will be posting about 2025's upcoming Horror books!


Thursday, December 5, 2024

#HorrorForLibraries Giveaway: Wake Up and Open Your Eyes by Clay McLeod Chapman

This week has been all about the Best of 2024 lists over on the general blog, so I thought it would be fun to giveaway a book that is already one of the best of 2025. It is book I already gave a star in Booklist and I have an ARC, courtesy of the publisher, for one of you. Details below but first, here are the rules on how to enter:

  1. You need to be affiliated with an American Library. My rationale behind that is that I will be encouraging you to read these books and share them with patrons. While many of them are advanced reader copies that you cannot add to your collections, if you get the chance to read them, my hope is that you will consider ordering a copy for your library and give away the ARC away as a prize or pass it on to a fellow staff member.
  2. If you are interested in being included in any giveaway at any time, you must email me at zombiegrl75 [at] gmail [dot] com with the subject line "#HorrorForLibraries." In the body of the email all you have to say is that you want to be entered and the name of your library.
  3. Each entry will be considered for EVERY giveaway. Meaning you enter once, and you are entered until you win. I will randomly draw a winner on Fridays sometime after 5pm central. But only entries received by 5pm each week will be considered for that week. I use Random.org and have a member of my family witness the "draw"based off your number in the Google Sheet.
  4. If you win, you are ineligible to win again for 4 weeks; you will have to re-enter after that time to be considered [I have a list of who has won, when, and what title]. However, if you do not win, you carry over into the next week. There is NO NEED to reenter.
Click here for the previous giveaway. Our winner was Becky (but not me!). Now on to this week's giveaway.

Okay I need you all to get ready for this one. I'm serious. This book is terrifyingly realistic, it is by a trusted #HorrorForLibraries authors, and it is coming out in just over 4 weeks. It is Wake Up and Open Your Eyes by Clay McLeod Chapman. Here is my draft review and three words from the general blog:
With his most ambitious novel yet, Chapman (What Kind of Mother), leans on established possession and zombie tropes and spins them into an original tale that hijacks readers’ nervous systems. It’s a few days before Christmas and Noah cannot reach his conservative parents in Virginia. Worried, he reluctantly leaves his family behind in Brooklyn to race south arriving at a disaster scene. His parents are clearly not well, and Fax* News is blaring in every room. But this opening is a brilliant red-herring, lulling readers into thinking they know what is coming. They do not. Told in three “phases” each with a distinct writing style, from Noah’s perspective to flashbacks of from his brother's family to a race through an apocalyptic landscape as Noah desperately heads home, incorporating social media, video transcripts, and news reports throughout, Chapman, chronicles The Great Reawakening– a virus that has patiently threaded its way through screens to infect half of America. A compelling, cinematic, visceral, and disturbing tale, driven by fully realized, sympathetic characters, this is a memorable novel that implicates all, regardless of where they stand on “the issues. A terrifying update to King’s classic Cell, for fans of discomforting, social commentary Horror like Wendig’s Wanderers duology, Felker-Martin’s Manhunt and Leede’s American Rapture

*Fax is not a typo 

Three Words That Describe This Book: visceral, nuanced, discomfitingly realistic

I need you all to click through to see my further appeal comments in the blog post from when the review first published. Seriously, this book is viscerally and existentially terrifying, it uses all five sense to involve fear, and it has a whopper of an ending. 

Just trust me and click through. And I hope everyone has this one on order already. Everyone will be talking about this one in January. EVERY ONE. I can see it being picked up by cable news as we enter the inauguration season. 

Thank you to Quirk Books for the ARC. This one hasn't even been cracked because I read a PDF for review very early.

Enter now and you are entered going forward into 2025. Which reminds me, this is the last giveaway of the year. I do not want to tax the postal service with unnecessary packages after this week.

Good Luck.

Monday, December 2, 2024

Best Horror of 2024 via Library Journal w/ Input and Annotations By Me

 Head on over to the main blog to see the entire LJ Best Books portal, but here on the Horror blog, I wanted to make sure the Horror list got posted here so that it was searchable as a resource. Please note, that main blog post also has easy backlist access.

I am very happy to have been part of the team who looked at the year that was and prioritized the reading experience of these titles as we weighed their status as best. It is a refreshing way to look at the "best" tag. As I went through the Horror selection experience over a couple of meetings with my editor and list mate, Melissa DeWild, the conversations we had about all of the titles we considered was enlightening.

Please note, this is the LJ Best Horror list. It is similar to, but not exactly, my personal Horror Best List for 2024. As we look at the genre, only titles that got a star in the Horror category in LJ can be considered. The experience of working on this list is very fulfilling. Plus, I had the pleasure of writing all the annotations for the Horror list.

My personal Best Horror of the Year list will be posted here later this month. But for now, enjoy this great list of Horror books that were an exceptional reading experience.

Go here or see below [minus the covers] for the Library Journal Best Horror 2024



Ajram, Sofia. Coup de GrĂ¢ce. Titan. ISBN 9781803369624.

Vicken enters the Montreal subway system with a plan to get off at the final stop and walk to the Saint Lawrence River to end his life. But when he arrives, he finds himself trapped in an underground maze with no exit. This immersive liminal-space novella illustrates, brutally and beautifully, the horror of mental illness and compels readers to finish the story in a single sitting.

Harrison, Rachel. So Thirsty. Berkley. ISBN 9780593642542.

Millennial Sloane is struggling after her husband cheats on her. But when he gifts her and her best friend a spa weekend for her birthday, she happily accepts. While living it up at the spa, the two women meet a group of eccentric Europeans, and their lives are changed forever. Readers will be delighted to sink their teeth into Harrison’s nuanced and thought-provoking take on the vampire trope.

Iglesias, Gabino. House of Bone and Rain. Mulholland. ISBN 9780316427012.

As Hurricane Maria bears down on Puerto Rico, childhood best friends Gabe, Xavier, Tavo, and Paul join Bimbo in his quest for revenge against the drug lord who gunned down Bimbo’s mother. Told with an engaging and honest narration, Gabe walks readers through the visceral monsters, both real and supernatural, that haunt the island, its history, and its people, as he repeatedly reminds readers, “All stories are ghost stories.”

Jones, Stephen Graham. I Was a Teenage Slasher. Saga. ISBN 9781668022245. 

Tolly recounts the summer of 1989, when as a 17-year-old living in Lamesa, TX, he killed several of his high school classmates. Beginning with the fateful night Tolly and his friend Amber attend a house party, Jones’s novel presents Tolly as the yin to “Indian Lake Trilogy” star Jade’s yang, delivering a highly entertaining, if chilling tale, and lays down new ground rules for the entire slasher genre.

Kiefer, Jenny. This Wretched Valley. Quirk. ISBN 9781683693680. 

Four twentysomethings entered the Kentucky woods on a mission to scale a newly discovered rock formation, except, as readers know from the novel’s opening pages, they were never seen alive again. Told from the point of view of each doomed character, Kiefer’s debut presents a terrifying tale of a land deeply rooted in evil, with a long-held thirst for human blood.

Kiste, Gwendolyn. The Haunting of Velkwood. Saga. ISBN 9781982172374. 

 Twenty years ago, one suburban block slipped into its own dimension. Everyone was lost except three girls who returned to college the night before. One of those girls, Talitha, now 40, is enticed to return in order to make contact with the little sister she left behind. Atmospheric and riveting, Kiste’s novel exposes the horror of suburban malaise and reminds readers that young women, if given the chance, are powerful enough to save the world.

Lima, Ananda. Craft: Stories I Wrote for the Devil. Tor. ISBN 9781250292971. 

 Lima’s debut is exactly what the title proclaims it to be, a novel in stories that “the writer” creates for the Devil throughout her life. The stories themselves range from weird and chilling to emotionally devastating; however, it is in the chapters between the stories (where the writer describes her lifelong interactions with the Devil) that unite the entire volume, making it an original, captivating, and unforgettable read.

McGregor, Tim. Eynhallow. Raw Dog Screaming. ISBN 9781947879676. 

 It’s 1797, and Agnes is one of 20 souls living on Eynhallow in the Orkney Islands. Life is hard, and visitors are rare. The sudden arrival of the rich Dr. Frankenstein upends everyone’s lives, especially that of Agnes, whose husband hires her out to be the stranger’s housekeeper. As Agnes gets to know Frankenstein, the tension, unease, and danger build, sightings of a monster lurking in the darkness increase, and Frankenstein’s curse becomes Agnes’s burden.

Tingle, Chuck. Bury Your Gays. Tor Nightfire. ISBN 9781250874658. 

 Misha is a semi-closeted horror screenwriter whose impressive career is peaking with an Oscar nomination, but then the algorithm that dominates this near-future Hollywood demands he kill off his women leads right after they kiss. Misha refuses, which turns him into the protagonist of a very real and extremely dangerous story. Tingle takes readers on an existential thrill ride filled with satire and original monsters, ultimately reminding them that horror is, at its core, a celebration of life.

Tremblay, Paul. Horror Movie. Morrow. ISBN 9780063070011. 

 “The Thin Kid,” the only survivor from the 1993 film Horror Movie, a never-fully-released cult sensation, is asked to work on the movie’s reboot 30 years later. Moving between 1993 and 2023, framed as an audiobook confessional by “The Thin Kid,” and including the full screenplay of the original film, the novel is not only unsettling from every angle, but it will also alter the way its readers interact with any horror movie ever again.