Published June 2026 via Quill & Crow
★★★★
Tryss is just trying to get home to say goodbye to her father, who doesn't have much time left—but when her car runs out of gas (and then breaks down) in a small town she's never heard of, things get...weird. There's no cell phone service, no mechanic, and no apparant way out...and to top it all off, the town's residents appear to be dead. Taxidermied, embalmed, crumbling to dust, you name it.
I don't read a lot of horror, but you know what I do read? I read weird trad wife books, apparently, and when I saw this one I had a sneaking suspicion that it would fit into that subgenre in a weird and unexpected way. It does and it doesn't, though I'm going to count this one as a trad wife book win for being so different from the others that I've read (well—Tryss is still a journalist, which seems to be a theme in these books—but just about everything else is different).
Now, we must be realistic here. In a horror movie, Tryss would die real fast; she has some survival instincts, but she also has a lot of journalistic instincts, and the latter tend to win out. She'd rather run around town and break into buildings to take pictures of dead bodies than she would try to cover her tracks; she's readier to trust the creepy women running the town than she is to, you know, maintain an appropriate level of caution. But then again: This is not a town in which keeping your head down and trying to sneak out past the town lines is really an option.
I did end up with some unanswered questions (in particular, mild spoilers in footnotes*). On the whole, though? Delightfully creepy. Don't read it while eating.
Thanks to the author and publisher for providing a review copy through NetGalley.
*What exactly is Barbara's backstory? Who was the deep voice before Tryss was knocked out? Is Barbara running the show, or not?









