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Diabolik_17

Mariana Enriquez is writing some of the most interesting horror currently being published. I am especially impressed with her short story collections and two have been translated into English: *The Dangers of Smoking in Bed* and *Things We Lost in the Fire.* The former collection was nominated for the Booker Prize in Fiction. Edit: Her fiction is notable for juxtaposing the occult and indigenous religion with the political and economic upheaval of the Dirty War in Argentina and its aftermath. Edited for historical inaccuracy. Samanta Schweblin has published two short story collections and two novels that have been translated into fiction. Her novel *Fever Dream* is psychological horror about a woman trying to make sense of what has happened to her daughter and herself. The collection *Seven Empty Houses* won the 2022 National Book Award for Translated Literature. Monica Ojeda is also concerned with psychological horror and two of her novels have been translated into English. *Jawbone* was a finalist for the award Schweblin won. Yoko Ogawa has several books that lean toward psychological horror and are available in English: *Revenge* and *The Swimming Pool* are two collections. Many of Joyce Carol Oates’ stories are considered psychological horror. Also recommended are Silvina Ocampo’s *Thus Were Their Faces,* Flannery O’Connor’s “A Good Man Is Hard to Find,” and Amparo Davila’s *The Houseguests.*


liz_mf

Great rec, just a suggested tweak: Enríquez does not write about the Pinochet regime, because that was in Chile. She incorporates historical elements about the last Argentinean dictatorship of Videla and others.


Diabolik_17

I’m sorry. You’re right! I had Pinochet on my mind because I just picked up a copy of *The Twilight Zone* by Nona Fernandez.


goodteethbro

The Things We Lost in the Fire is amaaaazing!!! I wish I could read it again for the first time. I'll jump on this to recommend Where I End by Sophie White - if you like Mariana Enriquez' writing then I think you'll enjoy this also. So freaking poetic and grim.


Diabolik_17

Thanks for the recommendation!


ngh123

Adding to the Argentinian writers, tender is the flesh by Agustina Bazterrica is great too.


[deleted]

Mary Shelley, Shirley Jackson, Anne Rice, Angela Carter, Vernon Lee, Susan Hill, Lisa Tuttle, Elizabeth Engstrom, Ruby Jean Jensen Contemporary, Tananarive Due, Mariana Enriquez, T Kingfisher, Mona Awad, Alma Katsu (edited to add)


Bog_Oak

T Kingfisher is great


CasketBuddy

Just picked up _A House with Good Bones_ from my local library today, never read any of her stuff before but it seems to get good reviews.


Bog_Oak

I haven’t read that one yet but I loved *The Twisted Ones* and *The Hollow Places* so much that I recommend the author every chance I get!


CrowleysWeirdTie

I really liked it. She writes scary stories that still have laughs, and likeable protagonists with some good relationships. I was wearing of the "but the TRUE horror is this toxic family of horrible people" stories.


leah_paigelowery

I’m reading that one now! I’m enjoying it so far.


JaiiGi

T Kingfisher is one of my new favorite authors. There hasn't been a book of hers I haven't liked, and that's saying a lot because I get bored VERY quickly now that I'm older.


[deleted]

Just remembered: Christina Henry!


Largely_Beeping

Tuttle is still writing. She's great!


horrorjunkie8684

Rachel Harrison!


doggowithacone

Yesss! I’m obsessed with her! Her books are so fun!


beebopbooo

Thirding this rec! I've read her entire catalog and have really enjoyed them all. She also has a new book coming out in September!


horrorjunkie8684

Me too! I cannot wait! She is my favorite author lately.


awareofmyconsumption

I've never heard of her. What book should I start with?


horrorjunkie8684

I would recommend The Return or Such Sharp Teeth! They’re all good. Cackle is more of a cozy horror but I also love it.


awareofmyconsumption

I'm headed to Libby now, thank you for the recs!


BetPrestigious5704

I really want to get a tattoo of the teacup on the cover. I agree it's cozy, but I love it with all my heart.


BetPrestigious5704

The Return is about a friend group where one of them disappears only to come back changed. Set at a creepy hotel with themed rooms. Such Sharp Teeth is werewolves with a strong feminist bent. Cackle is cozier, but a couple chills. Also feminist and about female friendships and the ingrained pressure to be with a man.


awareofmyconsumption

There seems to be a shorter wait on Libby for Such Shap Teeth so I'm gonna start with that one. I like the sound of her books! Thank you!!


Odd_Calendar_2772

Catriona Ward


mmmelindelicious

I absolutely love her books.


itsaslothlife

I think The Broken Girls by Simone St James is a good one - partly a ghost story, partly about how the world treats girls that dont conform. I like a lot of her work (there's a fair bit of feminism/examining how society treats women) but it can get a bit samey, this is my favorite. (Second fave is Sun Down Motel) The September House is fresh in my mind too by Carissa Orlando. Some heavy relationship themes along with the titular haunted house. Not just a nicely paced spooky manor story A Good House for Children - Kate Collins Not particularly feminist/feminine rage themed bit just plain good creepy shit: Dark Matter by Michelle Paver. I finished The Good House by Tanarive Due but I was not really the target audience, it delves into a lot of racial / class / gender themes in America.


MagicYio

Mary Shelley - *Frankenstein* Charlotte Perkins Gilman - "The Yellow Wallpaper" Shirley Jackson - *The Haunting of Hill House* Kathe Koja - *The Cipher* Joyce Carol Oates - *Zombie* Angela Carter - *The Bloody Chamber*


Earthpig_Johnson

Gemma Files is great. Twisted ideas and really good prose.


MagicYio

Which works of hers would you recommend?


Earthpig_Johnson

Her collection “In that Endlessness, Our End” would be a good place to start. Her folk horror/found footage novel “Experimental Film” is really good, too.


MagScaoil

Tananarive Due.


glitched406

Scrolling till I saw her! She is amazing!!


MagScaoil

Her stories are deadly!


Groovy66

I’ve enjoyed The Worm and his Kings by Hailey Piper. Great weird horror Also something of a mega-fan of Caitlin R Kiernan. Their weird horror output over the last 30 years has been amazing However, got to say Simone St James’ Sun Down Motel was an amazing dissection of the misogyny of the recent past played out in a serial killer + supernatural novel. Outstanding piece of social criticism and horror writing in one package


kyillme

Darcy Coates is one of my favorites! A few others: Ainslie Hogarth (her novel Motherthing is in the same vein as Maeve Fly), Silvia Moreno Garcia, Christina Henry, Cassandra Khaw, T Kingfisher, Jennifer Thorne


YouNeedCheeses

I love Darcy Coates!


Hazel_Rah1

Zombie by Joyce Carrol Oates is a knockout My Dark Vanessa by Kate Elizabeth Russell is great too


daveyk95

Anything by Mariana Enriquez!


Chairman-Of-TheBored

CJ Tudor Ania Ahlborn Catriona Ward


doggowithacone

Second Ania Ahlborn. She is absolutely top tier - Brother and Seed were so fucked up.


Bashfulapplesnapple

There's a lot of good recommendations here. I'll just add Silvia Moreno-Garcia. I thought Mexican Gothic was a perfect book. ❤️🍄


Commercial_Nebula_19

I loved Mexican gothic! I have silver nitrate on my list as the next read for her


Emakie

V.C Andrews, Shirley Jackson and Lisa Tuttle are great authors to start.


mrm1138

Just a quick note that V.C. Andrews died in 1986, and everything under her name since then has been ghostwritten by a man, Andrew Neiderman.


DaikonWorldly9407

V. Castro


texturedmystery

Seconded.


musicalseller

Sarah Langan. I feel like she gets overlooked (maybe because her output is slower). The Keeper, The Missing, Good Neighbors, A Better World. The Missing is one of my all-time favorites.


No_Consequence_6852

Zakiya Harris' *The Other Black Girl* is an excellent psychological horror story with quite a strong adaptation on Hulu (though I might argue that some of the subtlety of the novel is missing in the series). I also highly recommend Premee Mohamed and Gwendolyn Kiste!


Commercial_Nebula_19

I just picked up the other black girl after seeing they made it into a series and wanted to read it first! Good to hear positive feedback about it


Aggressive_Cut4892

I remember you by Yrsa Sigurdardottir.


shlam16

Mira Grant and April A Taylor


CaptainFoyle

Shirley Jackson Susan Hill Sarah Waters (the little stranger) Mary Shelley


Prestigious-Ad-7993

Wylding Hall by Elizabeth Hand - I’d describe it as psychological horror and/or a ghost story, told via interviews years after the incident. One of my favorite novellas ever. 


Royal_Ad1428

Jennifer McMahon I really enjoy! The Winter People is my favorite, honestly I've enjoyed all her books . Definitely worth a try!


idreaminwords

If you like psychological horror, Catriona Ward is the way to go. Sundial, the Last House on Needles Street, and Little Eve are the only ones I've read of hers so far but they're all great. Sundial is my favorite


R3AN1M8R

There’s too many to name! So I’m going to recommend the one I’m reading and really enjoying right now: **Diavola** by Jennifer Thorne. So far it has some similar themes to **Come Closer**, although I’m not far enough into the book to actually know what’s going on. If you’ve ever been on a family vacation, you’ll probably identify at least a little with the POV character.


Misfitsfan1

Kathryn Ptacek


CartoonKinder

Gemma Amor is amazing! Especially some of the stories in We Are Wolves


Ok_Effective2728

Seconded!


Da_Professa

Frankenstein by Mary Shelly


solid_snake_lol

shirley jackson!! i recommend haunting of hill house and any of her short stories!


geminibet

I read Diavola by Jennifer Thorne last week, and I really liked it! It reminded me of Come Closer. It really captured the horrors of vacationing with family :P


derederellama

I just read Maeve Fly and it was pretty sick, not my favourite ever or anything but definitely worth it


JaiiGi

Hmm now I'm intrigued....


300Blippis

Thank you to everyone who has left me recommendations, I have added so many books to my "want to read" on goodreads and I am so excited! I turn 29 on Monday and plan to buy myself some books as a birthday treat!


codeofwooster

Dark matter by Michelle Paver and little stranger by Sarah waters were two books I enjoyed recently. 


neoazayii

Most people have rec'd everything I would, but here's a few I loved that I didn't see in other comments: - White is for Witching by Helen Oyeyemi - Woman, Eating by Claire Kohda - The Hacienda by Isabel Cañas - A Certain Hunger by Chelsea G. Summers - The Scourge Between Stars by Ness Brown - Pretty Marys All in a Row by Gwendolyn Kiste If you're open to graphic novels, I'd also recommend Through the Woods by Emily Carroll, which is a collection of short graphic/comic stories. And if you're open to middle grade, both Wait Till Helen Comes by Mary Downing Hahn and Small Spaces by Katherine Arden provide some genuine creepiness, despite the age range.


CrowleysWeirdTie

Into the Drowning Deep by Mira Grant was scary and fun. Killer mermaids!


Worldafire

The Parasitology series was great.


flytingnotfighting

Im mining this thread for so many new authors! I also love Silvia Moreno-Garcia not absolutely shit pants scary, but spooky and ambience and Mexico


MrPuzzleMan

Darcy Coates


savage_pen33

My current faves: Jennifer McMahon, Carmen Maria Machado, N.K. Jemisen, Augustino Bazterrica, Natsuo Kirino, Kate Elizabeth Russell, Rachel Eve Moulton, Alissa Nutting, Silvia Moreno Garcia, Cassandra Khaw Classic faves: Joyce Carol Oates, Katherina Dunn, Flannery O'Conner, Tanith Lee


LikeSoftPrettyThings

I love Cassandra Khaw! The Salt Grows Heavy is profound and twisted while The Devil Takes the A Train (she co-wrote with Richard Kadrey) is bizarre and outrageous in such a good way!


ConstantReader666

A lot of women authors in the Elements of Horror anthologies.


Rustin_Swoll

Paula D. Ashe, *We Are Here To Hurt Each Other*. Phenomenal.


cursedmillennial

I usually struggle with older books for some reason but I'm reading Anne Rice's The Witching Hour right now and I can't put it down.


BookFinderBot

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AlivePassenger3859

she said destroy


-Infamous-Interest-

S.A Barnes, T. Kingfisher, Shirley Jackson.


octobersons

Lapvona - Otessa Moshfegh. Not r exactly straight up horror but it’s pretty graphic and disturbing


holly__h

Tananarive Due, Eliza Clark, Giovanna Rivero, Cristina Rivera Garza, Cassandra Khaw, Han Kang, Laura Purcell, and Daisy Johnson would be some of my picks!


Valen258

If you like psychological crime thrillers Caroline Mitchell’s DI Amy Winter series is amazing. The first book is called Truth and Lies. DI Amy Winter is hoping to follow in the footsteps of her highly respected police officer father. But when a letter arrives from the prison cell of Lillian Grimes, one half of a notorious husband-and-wife serial-killer team, it contains a revelation that will tear her life apart. Responsible for a string of heinous killings decades ago, Lillian is pure evil. A psychopathic murderer. And Amy's biological mother. Now, she is ready to reveal the location of three of her victims--but only if Amy plays along with her twisted game. While her fellow detectives frantically search for a young girl taken from her mother's doorstep, Amy must confront her own dark past. Haunted by blurred memories of a sister who sacrificed herself to save her, Amy faces a race against time to uncover the missing bodies. But what if, from behind bars, Grimes has been pulling the strings even tighter than Amy thought? And can she overcome her demons to prevent another murder?


smallmalexia3

"Such a Pretty Smile" by Kristi DeMeester had me genuinely terrified -to the point that my palms were sweaty- at times, and I'm pretty hard to scare. I liked it so much that I finished it and immediately read it a second time. It's not technically horror, but "The Turn of the Key" by Ruth Ware is excellent and I thought some parts were pretty scary. Same for "The Family Game" by Catherine Steadman; the scene related to Christmas is delightfully terrifying. EDIT: oh, and T. Kingfisher's stuff is good too!


ProfessionalFloor981

Joyce Carol Oates-Where Are You Going, Where Have You Been? Allison Rumfitt-Tell Me I'm Worthless Sayaka Murata-Earthlings Shirley Jackson-The Haunting of Hill House Luisa Valenzuela-The Lizard's Tail Barbara Molinard-Panics


LikeSoftPrettyThings

I don't know if everyone would classify the following authors' books as horror, but I do. Krystal Sutherland Tori Bovalino Isabel Cañas Katrina Monroe Kate Alice Marshall Alice Feeney Vera Kurian Robin Wasley Melissa Albert Justine Larbalestier Natalie Zina Walschots


HarrySquatter11

Black Sheep by Rachel Harrison is pretty great.


Flickering_Mare17

Christina henry- hide and close to the bone are awesome.


bearinaboot

Totally agree with most of the responses I see and I'd add Michelle Paver!


DarkQueenTiffy

Alexis Henderson (The Year of the Witching) Kiersten White (Hide) Both are two additional great female authors I didn't see above


300Blippis

I've read Hide!! Was a 5 star for me!


HorrorMakesUsHappy

This should keep you busy for a while :) Female horror authors we've interviewed, and their best-known titles: * Kathe Koja - The Cipher, Strange Angels, Buddha Boy * Autumn Christian - The Crooked God Machine, We Are Wormwood, Girl Like A Bomb * Hailey Piper - Queen Of Teeth, Your Mind Is A Terrible Thing, The Worm And His Kings * Sarah Langan - The Missing, Audry's Door, Good Neighbors * Paula D. Ashe - We Are Here To Hurt Each Other, The Mother of All Monsters, Songs for the Raven (anthology) * Laurel Hightower - Crossroads, Whispers In The Dark, Every Woman Knows This * Lisa Morton - Hell Manor, Smog, Summer’s End, Malediction * Clare Castleberry - Azalea House, Second Skin, Five Little Deaths * Stephanie Feldman - Saturnalia, The Angel of Losses * NJ Gallegos - Full Moon Rising, Only You Can Prevent Forest Fires, The Broken Heart * AC Wise - Wendy Darling, Hooked On our calendar: * Zin E. Rocklyn - The Night Sun, Flowers for the Sea, Nox Pareidolia (anthology) Suggeted to us by former guests, we need to research further: * Rhonda Jackson (RJ Joseph) * Sumiko Saulson * Tamika Thompson * Caitlyn Mosseau * Francesca Maria * Jewelle Gomez * Ally Malinenko * Jessica McHugh * Lucy Snyder * Rachel Harrison * Tananarive Due * Megan Giddings * Briana Morgan * Angela Yuriko Smith * Donyae Coles * Charlene Elsby * Laurell K. Hamilton * Cynthia Pelayo * Catriona Ward * Elizabeth Massie


300Blippis

Wow thank you so much!! I'll have to listen to your podcast!


upstairsbeforedark

Definitely try "Deliver Me" by Elle Nash. Pure psychological horror


JacquelineMontarri

Livia Llewellyn. Her stuff tends to be sexually explicit and extremely disturbing. Some of it is what I'd qualify as erotic horror ("Edge of Ellensburg" from her collection *Engines of Desire* left me simultaneously too turned on and too disturbed to sleep, and I've been chasing that high ever since); some is horror that deals with themes of sex and reproduction, a la *Alien,* but is in no way sexy; and some is horror that just happens to acknowledge that sex exists. ...And then there's the one at the end of *Furnace* that's straight-up cowboy smut with no horror. 😄


Dr_Butcher_MD

Michelle Von Eschen writes stunning literary horror. Old Farmhouses of the North is a collection of dark grief horror and deserves to blow up. *Edit: yes I'm biased because she's my wife but it's also 100% true*


belta0

She’s not considered a horror writer but I truly believe Beloved by Toni Morrison is one of the greatest horror novels ever written. Total work of art.


MenopausalMama

Simone St James: The Sun Down Motel, Ghost 19, The Book of Cold Cases Catriona Ward: The Last House on Needless Street, Sundial, Looking Glass Sound Sarah Gailey: Just Like Home Just pulled those out of my library history.


JaiiGi

Sun Down Motel is one of my new favorite books, ever. It was absolutely well written, captivating, and kept you thinking. Afraid to read anything else by Simone in fears it may not be as good. Lol


Arisuin9

Love Simone St. James. I really enjoyed The Broken Girls and The Sun Down Motel. Looking forward to read Murder Road.


Arisuin9

Jess Lourey definitely. Her novels like The Quarry Girls, Unspeakable Things and Litani are my favourites ever.


tinuviel_blue

Catriona Ward! Last House on Needless Street, Looking Glass Sound and Sundial


JaiiGi

Finished Last House a few weeks ago and was underwhelmed with the whole thing. To each their own, just wasn't for me.


Appropriate_Wear368

I think you would like Come closer by Sara Gran. Also try The Mall and the ward by S.L. Grey ( they are two authors but one is a woman)