R.I.P. Reads, Part II: Feito, King, Link, Paver & Taylor

Soon it’ll be all novellas, all the time around here. But first I have a few more October reads to review.

A belated Happy Halloween! As a kid in the U.S. suburbs, I loved Halloween. It was such fun planning costumes – pumpkin, cowgirl and picnic table are a few memorable ones that I remember thanks to photographs – and my hoard of candy would last me for months. But these days, I tend to be pretty grumpy about the holiday. It never used to be a thing in the UK, but it has been creeping in year on year. I don’t mind a creatively carved jack o’ lantern, tasteful decoration or clever homemade costume. What does get my goat is plastic tat, gratuitous gore and the dozens of sodden sweets and wrappers littering the streets after last night’s rain and wind.

Anyway, we enjoyed the stormy evening because we spent it at friends’ having delicious autumnal lasagne and parkin, playing instruments and board games and eavesdropping on the trick-or-treaters. I had to laugh when J said “Take a couple” and one little girl replied, “That’s okay, I don’t really like sweeties.” These friends were keeping some ancient traditions alive: carving a turnip, wearing one’s clothes inside out and walking between two fires to ward off fairies. They also put potatoes in the treats bowl, which definitely confused the kids. (One did take a spud!)

I really leaned into the Readers Imbibing Peril reading this year. I had a somewhat lacklustre first batch, but these five were great!

 

Victorian Psycho by Virginia Feito (2025)

This was among my Most Anticipated titles of the year – for the bonkers blurb but also because of how much I’d enjoyed Feito’s debut, Mrs. March. Both novels go deep with mentally disturbed protagonists. The first channeled Patricia Highsmith with its stylish psychological suspense; here we have a full-on blend of slasher horror and sadistic humour, wrapped up in a Victorian pastiche. Winifred Notty (naughty girl indeed) is the new governess at Ensor House on the Yorkshire moors. She couldn’t care less about her charges, Andrew and Drusilla. No, she’s here to exact revenge on the master of the house, Mr. Pounds. But not before she’s dispatched many a random servant and baby. “Bodies pile up in the attic.” Her brutal fantasies are so realistic that at times it’s difficult to separate them from what she actually carries out. Miss Notty is also a highly sexual being whose fixations could certainly be interpreted in Freudian ways. Feito spins a traumatic backstory for her antiheroine but doesn’t make it any excuse for her gleeful reign of terror. It’s delicious fun, especially for a Victorianist, but don’t attempt if you’re squeamish. (Read via NetGalley)

 

Misery by Stephen King (1987)

All these years I’d had two 1989–1990 films conflated: Misery and My Left Foot. I’ve not seen either but as an impressionable young’un I made a mental mash-up of the posters’ stills into a film featuring Daniel Day-Lewis as a paralyzed writer and Kathy Bates as a madwoman wielding an axe. (Turns out the left foot is relevant!)

Paul Sheldon wakes in a fog of pain, his legs shattered from a one-car accident on a snowy Colorado backroad. He’s famous for his historical potboilers about Misery Chastain but, like Arthur Conan Doyle with Sherlock Holmes, has killed off his most beloved character. Except now he’s in the home of Annie Wilkes, his rescuer and biggest fan, and she demands he resurrect Misery. Annie is a former nurse who left the profession after numerous suspicious deaths on her watch. She keeps Paul dependent on her – and on Novril, a fictional opiate. In a case of ‘Scheherazade complex’, he’ll be her prisoner until he’s completed a sequel that’s to her satisfaction. Compared to Pet Sematary, the only other King novel I’ve read, this was slow to draw me in because of the repetitive scenes in a claustrophobic setting, and I wearied of the excerpts from Paul’s manuscript. But eventually I was riveted, desperate to know how Paul was going to get out of this predicament and what the final showdown could be. Extremes of pain and obsession make this an intense study of the psychology of a wretched pair. (Public library)

 

Pretty Monsters by Kelly Link (2008)

This is a reissue edition geared towards young adults. All but one of the 10 stories were originally published in literary magazines or anthologies. The stories are long, some approaching novella length, and took me quite a while to read. I got through the first three and will save the rest for next year. In “The Wrong Grave,” a teen decides to dig up his dead girlfriend’s casket to reclaim the poems he rashly buried with her last year – as did Dante Gabriel Rossetti, which Link makes a point of mentioning. A terrific blend of spookiness and comedy ensues.

“The Wizards of Perfil” and the title story are 50-some and 60-some pages, respectively, which allows a lot of space for intriguing weirdness and side plots. In the former, Onion’s cousin Halsa is purchased to be a servant to a wizard. The cousins both have the gift of foresight but can’t get the wizards to take them seriously when they beg that something to be done to prevent human disasters. It’s a brilliant allegory of the danger of waiting for an external force – God, the government, whatever – to solve everything versus getting on with it yourself. In the title story, a group of teens are obsessed with a mysterious Doctor Who-esque television show called The Library, which colours all their interactions. The main character Jeremy’s father is an eccentric sci-fi novelist named Gordon Strangle Mars who has written his son into his latest plot in a disturbing way. Jeremy recently inherited a gas station and phone box in Las Vegas and occasionally calls the phone box to air his grievances and solicit supernatural aid. My only other experience of Link was a standalone story I was once sent for review, “The Summer People,” which I didn’t get on with, so I was surprised to encounter such top-notch fantasy/horror tales. (Little Free Library)

 

Rainforest by Michelle Paver (2025)

I’d read all three of Paver’s previous horror novels for adults (Thin Air, Dark Matter and Wakenhyrst) and found them easy, atmospheric reading but not nearly as scary as billed. This is her best yet. Set in 1973 on an expedition to Mexico, it has as its unreliable narrator Dr. Simon Corbett, an English entomologist. Adding to the findings of the archaeological dig he’s accompanying, he’ll be hunting for mantids (praying mantises, stick insects and the like) by fogging sacred trees with pesticides. He also experiments with taking a hallucinogenic plant extract used by the Indigenous shamans, hoping to be reunited with his lost love, Penelope.

We know that Corbett’s employment is tenuous and that he’s seeing a therapist. Paver authentically reproduces the casual racism and sexism of the time and seeds little hints that this protagonist may not be telling the whole truth about his relationship with Penelope. The long sequence where he’s lost in the jungle is fantastic. Corbett seems fated to repeat ancient masochistic rites, as if in penance for what he’s done wrong. My husband is an entomologist, so I was interested to read about period collecting practices. The novelty of the setting is a bonus to this high-quality psychological thriller and ghost story. (Public library)

 

Bone Broth by Alex Taylor (2025)

Ash is a trans man who starts working at a hole-in-the-wall ramen restaurant underneath a London railway arch. All he wants is to “pay for hormones, pay rent, [and] make enough to take a cutie on a date.” Bug’s Bones is run by an irascible elderly proprietor but staffed by a young multicultural bunch: Sock, Blue, Honey and Creamy. They quickly show Ash the ropes and within a month he’s turning out perfect bowls. He’s creeped out by the restaurant’s trademark bone broth, though, with its reminders of creatures turning into food. At the end of a drunken staff party, they find Bug lying dead and have to figure out what to do about it.

This storyline is in purple, whereas the alternating sequences of flashbacks are in a fleshy pinkish-red. As the two finally meet and meld, we see Ash trying to imitate the masculinity he sees on display while he waits for the surface to match what’s inside. I didn’t love the drawing style – though the full-page tableaux are a lot better than the high-school-sketchbook small panes – so that was an issue for me throughout, but this was an interesting, ghoulish take on the transmasc experience. Taylor won a First Graphic Novel Award.

With thanks to SelfMadeHero for the free copy for review.

 

And one DNF: Saltwash by Andrew Michael Hurley. (I was warned!) It had no menace or momentum at all…

 

Any stand-out creepy reading for you this year?

16 responses

  1. Elle's avatar

    Picnic table Halloween costume pics when??! That is brilliant. My childhood costumes tended to be very specific, and I’d get annoyed with adults who interpreted them (reasonably!) more generally (“Oh, you’re a pirate!” “NO, I’m sixteenth-century Irish lady pirate Grainne O’Malley, OBVIOUSLY”). Absolutely cackling at your mistaking Misery with My Left Foot – what a darkly appropriate confusion! It isn’t my favourite of the King novels I’ve read, but it’s terrific on storytelling, and the contract a writer makes with their readers, and it’s also very scary (to me) because of the gore, as well as the psychopathy of Annie. The scariest thing I read for RIP this year was probably King Sorrow, although Carissa Orlando’s The September House surprised me by being a really good haunted-house story.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      The photographic evidence will be in my sister’s basement somewhere. I think I got the idea from American Girl magazine and it turned out so cute. I got a red-and-white checked plastic tablecloth, draped it over a frame on my shoulders (with hole for head), and glued paper plates, plastic cups and foodstuffs on — and don’t forget the lines of fake ants!

      Like

      1. Elle's avatar

        I think I remember American Girl magazine! Oh my gosh, that’s exactly the sort of thing they’d have suggested. Adorable.

        Like

  2. whatmeread's avatar

    I have Victorian Psycho on my list already. It sounds like a hoot. I also just recently heard of Paver, so I’ll have to give her a try.

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I can’t tell if the Feito would be to your taste/sense of humor, but you can only try! Paver is a reliable author.

      Liked by 1 person

      1. whatmeread's avatar

        I read one by her already and enjoyed it.

        Like

  3. Cathy746books's avatar

    I adored Victorian Psycho. I thought it was so gleeful

    Liked by 1 person

  4. Annabel (AnnaBookBel)'s avatar

    Victorian Psycho and Rain Forest were both brilliant weren’t they? I never read Misery, just saw the film which was suitably gruesome!

    Liked by 1 person

  5. […] with my Halloween-tide R.I.P. reading (here and here), I’ve been reading books about ancestors and the dead – appropriate for All Saints’ Day […]

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  6. Laura's avatar

    Ah, I still love Halloween, though agree that it’s never as good here as in the US. I’ve seen a lot of rave reviews for Victorian Psycho so will have to give it a try, and I’m glad that Misery worked out for you in the end. I personally found Rainforest the least frightening of Paver’s spooky trilogy (Wakenhyrst is a bit of a different, and IMO, inferior beast) – I liked it but felt it was more of a character study than a horror novel. My creepiest read in November was definitely Josh Malerman’s Incidents Around The House.

    Liked by 1 person

  7. Marcie McCauley's avatar

    It was a very quiet year for kids on H this year. Not as quiet as last year (one kid… it had already snowed heheh) but still quiet (relatively). I was curious how you’d make out with Misery and wondered if it might have crossed the line, but obviously not! (It took me a second to put together the reason for your confusion… because I saw both films when they were new and hadn’t confused them myself… but then it all made sense. HAaaaaa!!)

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      Which King to read next? The Shining, maybe. IT was just too massive to contemplate this year (and was also on loan).

      Like

      1. Marcie McCauley's avatar

        The other film coming out probably has other devotees rereading let alone you wanting to read it for the first time.

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  8. Laila@BigReadingLife's avatar

    So interesting to read about how Halloween is different over there. I do love it – but I didn’t really get back into it until my son was so into it as a youngster. And he’s still into it and actually went trick or treating with friends this year, despite not really liking much candy. (Guess who got some of his leftovers?) 😉 Anyway, the potato thing intrigues me. I have to look that up. Reminds me of Charlie Brown getting a rock!

    Liked by 1 person

    1. Rebecca Foster's avatar

      I imagine having an enthusiastic kid helps (though my sister hates the holiday).

      We also recited poetry/lyrics before starting dinner. I don’t know if that’s their personal ritual or a known one. Luckily, I still remember the first stanza of “The Raven” by Edgar Allan Poe, which I memorized in full in middle school.

      Liked by 1 person

  9. Jenna @ Falling Letters's avatar

    I considered picking up Victorian Pyscho as one of my spooky reads this season but hesitated due to the gore – sounds like I made the right call skipping it, as a somewhat squeamish person. 😅 I did pick up Wakenhyrst as my first read by Michelle Paver (I was more curious about Dark Matter, but my library didn’t have it). I will take Rainforest under consideration as well. My most stand out creepy read this year was Something’s Up with Arlo, a middle grade book about a previously-friendly ghost who suddenly starts behaving in a scary out of character manner.

    Liked by 1 person

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