Books I’m Excited for in 2026

The new year is already well under way, but there’s still plenty of time to add to your 2026 TBR! As I like to do every year, I have combed through book announcements and publishers’ lists to bring you ten of my most anticipated releases for the year. The titles below range from pure horror to fantasy to cozy sci-fi, with some dashes of mystery and romance.

But before I dive into my list, I first want to note that January has been dubbed International Gothic Reading Month by the Society for the Study of the American Gothic. A committee of Gothic fiction authors have put together an extensive reading list and are spending the month encouraging more people to experience the somber joys of Gothic literature. Check out their home page here, and peruse their suggested readings while you wait for the books below to be released. Here at The Gothic Library, every month is Gothic Reading Month, but I’d love to see IGRM get more people into the genre! And now, onto this year’s new releases that I am most excited for: Continue reading Books I’m Excited for in 2026

My 2025 Reading Recap

It’s been a weird year, both in my reading life and in the world beyond. I felt pulled in too many directions at once, and wound up feeling less productive than usual—both in terms of how many books I read and in general. That said, I still had some good times and some great reads. And I’m aiming to be more intentional and more focused in 2026. 

As of this writing, I have read 43 books out of my stated goal of 50 books for the year, with maybe time to squeeze one or two more in before the year ends. This will be the first time since 2022 that I haven’t met my numerical goal—though if we were counting books I started rather than books I finished, I’d have hit the mark! Aside from one or two that I intentionally DNFed (did not finish), there are at least five books that I got partway through and was enjoying but wound up inadvertently abandoning. This happened largely because I’ve been reading to a lot of deadlines—either book club meetings or something work-related—and not giving myself enough time. Then when those deadlines passed, I set the half-finished book down in favor of something else that felt urgent. This also happened with books that I was excited to read and brought on vacation with me, but then felt that I had to return to my obligation-books when my trip was over. I’ve been trying to finish as many of these as I can before the end of the year, but I definitely want to try to avoid ending up in this situation in the future. To do that, I think I need to give myself more time to start a book ahead of book club meetings and also try to avoid spreading myself too thin.  Continue reading My 2025 Reading Recap

Books I’m Excited for in 2025

Happy New Year (almost)! As I get ready to write my New Year’s Resolutions for 2025, I always like to look ahead to the books that will be coming out over the next year. Here are just a few of the ones that I’m excited for: 

1) Victorian Psycho by Virginia Feito (set to be released February 4)

Victorian Psycho coverA Victorian, gender-swapped American Psycho? The pitch for this one certainly has me intrigued. The book follows Winifred Notty as she plays the role of the perfect governess at Ensor House while occasionally giving in to her darkest impulses.

2) Sick Houses: Haunted Homes and the Architecture of Dread by Leila Taylor (set to be released February 11)

Sick Houses coverIt’s rare that I include a nonfiction book on this list, but I loved Leila Taylor’s Darkly: Black History and America’s Gothic Soul back in 2019 and just learned that she’s coming out with a second book. Sick Houses explores the role that houses and domestic spaces play in the horror genre, from Otranto to Amityville. I always enjoy Taylor’s analyses of horror and the Gothic and can’t wait to see what new insights she provides here.

3) The River Has Roots by Amal El-Mohtar (set to be released March 4)

The River Has Roots coverI haven’t read any of Amal El-Mohtar’s solo works before, only the brilliant This Is How You Lose the Time War, cowritten with Max Gladstone, but this dark fantasy inspired by fairy lore and folk ballads sounds right up my alley.

4) The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones (set to be released March 18)

The Buffalo Hunter Hunter coverI’ve been a big fan of Stephen Graham Jones’s works, from The Only Good Indians to My Heart Is a Chainsaw and I Was a Teenage Slasher, so of course I have to check out his next piece of gut-wrenching horror. I’m particularly excited to see that The Buffalo Hunter Hunter is a historical novel that makes use of the found document trope. Presented as the diary of a Lutheran pastor and transcripts of interviews with the locals, the story takes place on a Blackfeet reservation in the year 1912. And it involves a vampire. What more could you need?

5) Overgrowth by Mira Grant (set to be released May 6)

Overgrowth coverMira Grant (Seanan McGuire’s more horror-heavy pseudonym) has been one of my favorite horror writers since I first discovered her short fiction in Ellen Datlow’s various anthologies, but the last full-length novel written under this pseudonym that I read was her mermaid slasher Into the Drowning Deep—far and away my favorite book of 2018. So you can imagine my excitement when I learned that we’re getting some new Mira Grant this year. Not just that, but it’s a tale of pernicious plants and alien invasions. I can’t wait to see how Mira Grant tackles these well-worn subgenres.

6) The Bewitching by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (set to be released July 15)

The Bewitching coverSince first reading Mexican Gothic in 2020, I’ve been gobbling up all of the Silvia Moreno-Garcia books I can get my hands on. This new one is a generation-spanning dark academia tale of women and witchcraft that centers on a graduate student named Minerva as she researches a mysterious horror author and the strange happenings that occurred at her school decades earlier.

7) America’s Most Gothic by Leanna Renee Hieber and Andrea Janes (set to be released July 29)

America's Most Gothic coverA second nonfiction book on the list! You know no yearly TBR is complete without a Leanna Renee Hieber book on the pile. This new one is a followup of sorts to this year’s A Haunted History of Invisible Women, both cowritten with Andrea Janes, founder of NYC’s spooky walking tour company Boroughs of the Dead. While Haunted History focused specifically on female-centered hauntings, America’s Most Gothic takes a broader look at real-life hauntings and how they relate to the tropes of Gothic literature. Absolutely the kind of book that this blog was made to review. 

8) The Possession of Alba Díaz by Isabel Cañas (set to be released August 19)

The Possession of Alba DiazOne of my favorite books I read this year was Vampires of El Norte by Isabel Cañas, so I’m excited to see what’s next from her. Set in 1765, The Possession of Alba Díaz explores the history of Mexico’s silver mines, but things take a demonic turn when Alba flees her plague-ravaged village only to become infected with something even worse…. It’s also a love story and, as I discovered this year, I really do love the horromance combo!

9) Katabasis by R.F. Kuang (set to be released August 26)

I have not yet read any R.F. Kuang, despite seeing all the hype for Yellowface and Babel. But perhaps this new one will be the perfect place to start. Katabasis—or, a journey to the underworld—was one of the first literary tropes I remember ever learning about, a seed planted in my grade school education that would eventually grow into the interests that led me to create this blog. I’m excited to see how R.F. Kuang tackles this most ancient of literary tropes in a dark academia setting. Alice Law has sacrificed everything to be able to study magic with renowned Cambridge professor Jacob Grimes. So when a magical accident casts Grimes into Hell before he can even write Alice a recommendation letter, she has no choice but to go in after him. I’m seeing some parallels to Leigh Bardugo’s Hell Bent here, but perhaps it’s no surprise that some academics might equate part of the university experience with a journey through the fiery pits of hell….

10) Her Wicked Roots by Tanya Pell (set to be released October 7)

And lastly, one more plant horror book. I’m not familiar with this author, but when I saw that this was a queer reimagining of Nathaniel Hawthorne’s 1844 story “Rappaccini’s Daughter,” I knew I had to add it to the list! 

 

What’s on your reading list for 2025? Any good Gothic or horror books I didn’t include here? Are any of these going in your TBR pile? Let me know in the comments!

My 2024 Reading Recap

I can’t believe 2024 is already drawing to an end! This has been another great reading year for me. While not quite the high of 2023—which I called one of the best reading years of my adult life—I’m quite happy with both the quality and quantity of books I read this year. 

Photo of crochet snake, curled in a circle around a paper key showcasing how each color of yarn represents a genre
I’m still adding my August books to the Book Snake…

Continue reading My 2024 Reading Recap

Books I’m Excited for in 2024

Happy 2024! First things first: as I mentioned at the end of last week’s post, I will be moving to an every-other-week posting schedule this year. But though I’ll be posting less often, I am still just as excited as always about all of the new books coming out this year! Here are just a few of the new releases I am most looking forward to:

1) The Djinn Waits a Hundred Years by Shubnum Khan (set to be released January 9)

The Djinn Waits A Hundred Years coverThis Gothic horror novel is set off the coast of South Africa in a ruined mansion haunted by a djinn. When a young girl named Sana moves in with her father, she uncovers the estate’s long-buried secrets and a tragic tale of lost love. I always love to see classic Gothic tropes in new, unfamiliar settings. Continue reading Books I’m Excited for in 2024

My 2023 Reading Recap

What a great year for reading it’s been! This is the first year in at least a decade that I haven’t participated in the official Goodreads Reading Challenge, since I stopped using Goodreads to track my reading. I did, however, still set reading goals for myself and keep track of each book I read, and I found 2023 to be one of the best reading years of my adult life.

Crocheted snake with many bands of different colors
My 2023 Reading Log Snake, with a color-coded key: Purple for short story collections; light blue for mystery/thriller; gray for nonfiction; dark blue for “other”; black for horror; red for romance; green for sci-fi; and yellow for fantasy

Continue reading My 2023 Reading Recap

Books I’m Excited for in 2023

Happy New Year! One of my favorite parts of this celebratory season is researching all of the exciting new books that will be coming out in the new year. This year, I found so many intriguing titles that I had trouble narrowing them down. Here are just a few of the books coming out in 2023 that are immediately going on my to-read list: 

1) Hell Bent by Leigh Bardugo (set to be released January 10)

Hell Bent coverAt last, we are getting a sequel to Ninth House, Leigh Bardugo’s dark academia novel about the occult societies of Yale! At the end of the first book, Alex learned that her mentor Darlington had disappeared through a portal into Purgatory and is still trapped on the other side. In this book, she embarks on an impossible rescue mission. Even the esteemed Lethe organization isn’t willing to risk their resources to save one of their own. But if anyone can get to hell and back with only her wits, some arcane texts, and a ragtag band of allies, it’s Alex Stern. And sure, why not throw in a series of unexplained murders for her to solve, as well?

2) Don’t Fear the Reaper by Stephen Graham Jones (set to be released February 7)

Dont Fear the Reaper coverHere’s another sequel, this time to Stephen Graham Jones’s My Heart Is a Chainsaw, which I read last year. Book one introduced us to young Jade Daniels, a high schooler in the rural Idaho town of Proofrock who views the world through the lens of her favorite slasher movies. The first book left the reader wondering just how unreliable of a narrator Jade might be, right up until the bodies start dropping during a big party on Indian Lake. Unfortunately, Jade was left on the hook for these murders, and this second book picks up after she’s spent a few years in jail. Jade’s return to Proofrock happens to coincide with the escape of a local serial killer set on seeking vengeance.

3) The Foxglove King by Hannah F. Whitten (set to be released March 7) 

The Foxglove King coverI haven’t read any of Hannah F. Whitten’s other books yet, but the description of this first book in a new YA fantasy series caught my eye. In it, a young woman with illicit death magic is thrust into court politics when the king needs her to solve a series of mass deaths.

4) Lone Women by Victor LaValle (set to be released March 21)

Lone Women coverI heard Victor LaValle read a few pages from his manuscript of this book at the Fantastic Fiction at KGB Bar reading series in NYC last year and am excited for this book to come out so that I can finally read the rest! LaValle blends horror with western in this tale of a woman trying to outrun her secrets as she journeys from California to become a homesteader in Montana in the early twentieth century.

5) A House with Good Bones by T. Kingfisher (set to be released March 28)

A House with Good Bones coverI read my first T. Kingfisher book last year—What Moves the Dead—and absolutely fell in love. Now the author is back with her own spin on the haunted house genre, A House with Good Bones. In this Southern Gothic, a woman arrives at her mother’s house for an extended visit, only to discover that neither the house nor her mother are quite how she remembers them. The house has been painted a sterile white and is littered with unsettling objects like jars of teeth and creepy paintings. Meanwhile, her mother is nervous and jumpy but won’t explain why. Sounds like this family has some buried secrets that are ripe for discovering.

6) Witch King by Martha Wells (set to be released May 30)

Witch King coverEarlier in the pandemic, I absolutely devoured Martha Wells’s Murderbot books. But though I’ve only known her for her science fiction, I’m excited to check out her first fantasy novel in over a decade. And how could I resist the premise of a powerful, long-dead demon who is accidentally resurrected by a foolish lesser mage?

7) The Reformatory by Tananarive Due (set to be released June 27)

The Reformatory coverTo my great shame, I have not yet read any of Tananarive Due’s works, despite how many times she’s been recommended to me. But this book looks like it would be a great place to start! The Reformatory explores the horrors of racism and injustice in a segregated reform school in Jim Crow Florida.

8) Silver Nitrate by Silvia Moreno-Garcia (set to be released July 18)

Silver Nitrate coverSince first picking up Mexican Gothic in 2020, I have yet to be disappointed by a Silvia Moreno-Garcia novel. Her newest book is a dark thriller that combines the horror cinema scene of 1990s Mexico City with Nazi occultism. When overlooked sound editor Montserrat and fading opera star Tristán are roped into helping a washed-up director finish a film allegedly shot using magic-imbued silver nitrate stock, they discover that sorcerers and magic are not just the stuff of movies….

9) Alecto the Ninth by Tamsyn Muir (set to be released October 10)

Perhaps one of the most anticipated books coming out next year is the conclusion to Tamsyn Muir’s Locked Tomb series. Gideon the Ninth, Harrow the Ninth, and Nona the Ninth have all been among my favorite books of the last three years, so I can’t wait to see what Alecto the Ninth has in store. Little information has been released yet about the finale to this epic science fantasy series, if the pattern of the previous books and the final chapter of Nona are anything to go by, this book will likely be told from the perspective of Alecto, the first entity to be resurrected by the Emperor Undying at the end of the world. And it seems like she has some scores to settle.

10) The Pomegranate Gate by Ariel Kaplan (set to be released Fall of 2023)

I’m so excited to see more and more Jewish-inspired fantasy coming out these days. This first foray into adult fantasy by heretofore YA author Ariel Kaplan draws on Jewish folklore and the history of the Spanish Inquisition. Set in a fantasy world with parallels to fifteenth-century Spain, the story centers on Toba and Naftaly, who each have strange abilities and secrets. Toba can write faster than she can speak, in multiple languages, with both hands at the same time, while Naftaly has unusual dreams of square-pupiled strangers in a magical world. While struggling for their survival, both uncover hidden truths about their own identities, their histories, and the connections between the human and magical realms.

 

What books are on your reading list for 2023? Are you planning on reading any of those listed above? Did I miss any upcoming releases you think should be on my list? Let me know in the comments!

My 2022 Reading Challenge Recap

This year has been a year full of major life changes, including all sorts of changes to my reading habits. One major change is that I’m starting to move away from Goodreads, and am reevaluating how I track and document the books that I read. So this may very well be my last time doing the Goodreads Reading Challenge, specifically, though I will still be tracking my books and setting numerical goals. I’m still experimenting with finding the best alternatives, but one that I’ve started using is StoryGraph. I’m not sure how much I’ll be posting on there, but you can follow along with me at TheGothicLibrary.

Continue reading My 2022 Reading Challenge Recap

Books I’m Excited for in 2022

Now that 2021 is behind us, it’s time to look ahead to the new year. There’s no telling what 2022 will bring us, and I’ve been struggling with feeling optimistic as we head into another year of the pandemic, but at least one good thing is certain: there will always be new books! In fact, there are so many exciting new releases coming, that I was able to compile this year’s list of books to read in record time. Here are just a few of the books I’m looking forward to: Continue reading Books I’m Excited for in 2022

My 2021 Reading Challenge Recap

This year has been an amazing reading year for me—though it’s been a real rollercoaster of a year in almost every other way. These days, I’m reading at a pace that I haven’t matched since high school, often finishing more than one book a week. This is the first time in many years that I’ve easily blown past my numerical reading goal. However, I wasn’t quite as successful with my content-based goals. Let me walk you through my year in books:

Graphic that reads "2021 Reading Challenge" at the top, with "Your 2021 Books" below in smaller letters. Beneath this heading are three rows of five book covers each. Continue reading My 2021 Reading Challenge Recap