I am a reader and an author. Both my reading and writing diets are deeply grounded in gothic novels. This list mixes up some of the classics from way back with more recent works. All of them give the flavor of this fascinating realm in literature. There is nothing more satisfying than lucking into a story that is truly original, too, which these recommendations are. Find a comfy perch with a drink of your choosing and take some time with these books. I wouldn’t steer you wrong, and I stand behind all five of these recommendations.
This incredible read was especially so because I remembered every single plot point and detail from the 1970s TV series—which was truly faithful to the novel—despite being young when I watched the show.
Upon finishing the novel, it made perfect sense why it had stuck in my memory grooves like cement. Because this story… this story… is really, really something. The fictional village in the story is called Cornwall Coombe because the villagers are all descendants of Cornish people who settled the area.
It delves into folk traditions from the ages brought over and carried out. These traditions are the basis of a gothic, folk horror nightmare that unravels for a family who move into the town and leads to a truly chilling outcome.
A family flees the crime-ridden city-and finds something worse-in "a brilliantly imagined horror story" by the New York Times-bestselling author (The Boston Globe).
After watching his asthmatic daughter suffer in the foul city air, Theodore Constantine decides to get back to the land. When he and his wife search New England for the perfect nineteenth-century home, they find no township more charming, no countryside more idyllic than the farming village of Cornwall Coombe. Here they begin a new life: simple, pure, close to nature-and ultimately more terrifying than Manhattan's darkest alley.
When the Constantines win the friendship of the town…
This haunting, gothic masterpiece was also an immersive read for me for another reason.
A couple of years back, I was fortunate to be able to travel to Cornwall. I was in duMaurier country in the exact setting that inspired the author to pen Rebecca. I could even catch a glimpse in the distance of Menabilly, the real-life Manderley, in addition to walking the cove where Rebecca and her boat, Je reviens, vanished.
So, a fully immersive experience for me, along with relishing the gothic mastery that duMaurier brings to a reader. If you haven't read it yet...you should.
* 'The greatest psychological thriller of all time' ERIN KELLY * 'One of the most influential novels of the twentieth century' SARAH WATERS * 'It's the book every writer wishes they'd written' CLARE MACKINTOSH
'Last night I dreamt I went to Manderley again . . .'
Working as a lady's companion, our heroine's outlook is bleak until, on a trip to the south of France, she meets a handsome widower whose proposal takes her by surprise. She accepts but, whisked from glamorous Monte Carlo to brooding Manderley, the new Mrs de Winter finds Max a changed man. And the memory…
Award-winning writer Laurence Klavan's newest collection of stories features twenty darkly comic and largely speculative tales.
People deal with aging parents, a world out of kilter, and their own arrested development today and in the near future, as Klavan weaves together threads of humanity and strangeness to dizzying and heartfelt…
This novel's compelling cover reeled in this reader straightaway and, indeed, delivers with a plot that captures the gothic folk horror genre in a tidy and well-written package.
As I read it, it felt like Harvest Home and The Wicker Man were seated on either shoulder. Overarching the story is also a "morality play" at work, expertly woven in. Bonus points for historical roots and an English village setting.
So original, so folky horror, so good and, simply put, a treat.
'Withered Hill is the ultimate nightmare destination' Laird Barron
Inside
A year ago Sophie Wickham stumbled into the isolated Lancashire village of Withered Hill, naked, alone and with no memory of who she is.
Surrounded by a thick ring of woodland, its inhabitants seem to be of another world, drenched in pagan, folklorish traditions.
As Sophie struggles to regain the memories of her life from before, she quickly realises she is a prisoner after multiple failed escape attempts. But is it the locals who keep her trapped, with smiles on their faces, or something else,…
In this book, the author reveals herself to be a mistress of the craft as the storyline is deftly spooled out and never dips into a lull or period of tedium.
It is an impressive feat to keep the reader’s interest line by line. Then there is this gothic plot. I listened to Wright discuss the inspiration of this story at a book festival panel called “American Gothic,” where she explained the profound influence of the Shakespeare play, Measure for Measure, and how it formed a loose framework for this novel.
That said, though, this story is so refreshingly original—no tropes, no obvious plot points. I continued to be struck by this originality as I read it. I did not want the experience to end; however, I could let it go for one reason: SNAKES!!
An eerie Appalachian town. A fatal fire. Three women whose fates intertwine . . .
Essa Montgomery and her brother Clyde were brought up in New Hope, a serpent-handling church in Vintera, West Virginia, until the shocking deaths of both their parents closed the church down. Now twenty, reclusive Essa lives alone in her childhood home in the shadow of New Hope, which to her horror has been taken over by a new charismatic, unsettling pastor who continues the dangerous practice. So when the church burns down, she's glad - until she learns that two people died in the blaze,…
A wind sorcerer. A dark spirit. An unsolved murder.
On the haunted Draakensky Windmill Estate, sketch artist Charlotte Knight arrives to live on the property, hired to illustrate the poetry of Rainer Maria Rilke—a bright and lucrative opportunity to boost her struggling art career.
This author masterfully captures rich elements from the gothic genre and its subgenres in The Artist of Blackberry Grange.
The setting and timeframe of Kansas City, Missouri, and Eureka Springs, Arkansas, in the 1920s provide a wonderful backdrop for this tale of many, many layers about a plucky heroine named Sadie.
An undercurrent weaving throughout is caregiving for a loved one with dementia, which many readers (including myself) can identify with. With shades of Oscar Wilde’s The Picture of Dorian Gray and undertones from Daphne du Maurier, The Artist of Blackberry Grange is truly gothic lightning in a bottle, and I did not want it to end.
For a young caregiver in the Ozarks, an old house holds haunting memories in a ghostly novel about family secrets, sacrifice, and lost loves by the author of The Devil and Mrs. Davenport.
In the summer of 1925, the winds of change are particularly chilling for a young woman whose life has suddenly become unbalanced.
Devastated by her mother's death and a cruel, broken engagement, Sadie Halloran learns that her great-aunt Marguerite, a renowned artist now in the throes of dementia, needs a live-in companion. Grasping at newfound purpose, Sadie leaves her desolate Kansas City boardinghouse for Blackberry Grange, Marguerite's…
A midlife calamity, an eerie town’s secrets, and unexpected second chances…
While stuck in a midlife meltdown with a broken marriage, angry offspring, and a crumbling career, Sam Murdoch stumbles upon a long-buried family secret: the grandfather he idolized once shot a man. Desperate for an escape (and some answers), he hits the road with his eccentric college buddy, Godfrey, on a quest for truth. Their journey takes an unexpected and dark turn in a town called Middlevale. Amid the corn shocks and scythes, Sam is thrown into a face-off with superstitious and maybe unhinged townsfolk, and he must fight to find a path forward.
When Cass leaves London with a broken heart, she plans to settle on the beautiful Australian coastline where she holidayed as a child. Yet when she arrives, the old house she purchased is not what she expected, nor are the eerie noises in the night.
Winner of Indies Today’s 2021 Best Contemporary Novel
“A flawless literary gem."
Can anyone have both fame and love? Andrew O’Connell is Hollywood’s next big leading man, and the rakish Irishman is basking in his newfound celebrity while thirsting for both greater fame and for someone to love.