House of Monstrous Women by Daphne Fama
Josephine has been invited by her dearest childhood friend to the Ranoco house where they will play a game. The prize, if she manages to win, is her heart's desire. The house itself is mazelike, with color coded hallways and ominously decorated walls. Veiled servants lurk silently in corners and corridors. The game is one they played in the forest as children, with much higher, darker stakes. Because the book is set in the Phillipines in 1986, I didn't have a clear picture of the setting and had only the vaguest understanding of the politics that play a major part in Josephine's life. (I knew a bit about the folklore because one of my kids explained it to me a few months back.) It's a dark, fascinating horror story that I thoroughly enjoyed.
Red Runs the Witch's Thread by Victoria Williamson
Set in seventeenth century Scotland, this short horror novel is drenched in vivid imagery. Christian Shaw strives to produce the whitest threads possible and is unable to escape the fragmented memories of what she did as a child. The story is fascinating and probably not for the squeamish since it absolutely wallows in the blood and fear and misery associated with menstruation and childbirth. I didn't realize until the author's note at the end that Christian and her company -- and the witches who were burned after her accusations -- were real.
The Witch's Orchard by Archer Sullivan
Three little girls were abducted, creepy apple head dolls left in their places. Ten years later, the crimes haven't been solved and PI Annie Gore is hired by a member of one girl's family to investigate. I liked Annie and the way she viewed her world. I also liked the complex web of relationships the author developed between the townspeople. What threw me were the dolls. It's repeated over and over that they're strictly an Appalachian thing...but my great-grandma was making them here in the Pacific Northwest. I'm probably overthinking that.
Last One Out by Steph Nelson
This thriller got off to such a strong start that I was immediately hooked. Three teenagers hike to an isolated hotspring late at night, never dreaming that a killer lurks behind the rocks. Two bodies are discovered the following morning. As for Chloe....well, there's no trace of her until she walks into her own memorial twenty-five years later. After those first few chapters, things started to bog down. The plot moves between Chloe in the past and her cousin in the present day. The trigger warnings before the book give away significant plot elements, making me think that there has to be a better way to provide the information to readers who want to be forewarned without spoilers for those of us who are fine taking our chances.
The Mango Murders by Lucy Burdette
Hayley Snow is literally plunged into this mystery when the boat she's attending a cocktail party on explodes, sending everyone into the ocean. Once the authorities determine how the boat waas destroyed, the next question is why? And who did it? Before finally arriving at the right answers, Hayley explores a ton of different possibilities. This is only the second book in the series I've read, so I know I'm missing more than a dozen book's worth of back story. I enjoyed the setting, and the relationship between Hayley and her friends and family, but I found the random quotes at the beginning of each chapter distracting.
Disclosure -- The publishers provided me with advance review copies.