Round-up: 4 horror books ripe for nights of summer reading

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Don’t Fear the Reaper

Stephen Graham Jones

Saga Press, 455 pages, $34.99

With “Don’t Fear the Reaper,” the second in the Indian Lake Trilogy, Stephen Graham Jones establishes himself as the undisputed master of the literary slasher novel. Jones’ freakish knowledge of the 1980s slasher movie sub-genre alone would have earned him the title, but his powers as a storyteller and crafter of believable characters push him to the front ranks of all horror authors working today. Jade Daniels, the sardonic final girl of “My Heart Is a Chainsaw,” returns to Proofrock, Idaho, four years after surviving the Independence Day Massacre. Her arrival, one day before Friday the 13th, coincides with a nearby avalanche that waylays a police convoy carrying a notorious serial killer, “Dark Mill South,” to a maximum-security facility. When Dark Mill South escapes and makes his way to Proofrock, Jade, still a suspect in the first massacre, is forced to rescue the townies again while facing down a lifetime of trauma.

The Insatiable Volt Sisters

Rachel Eve Moulton

Farrar, Straus Giroux, 448 pages, $24

Eleven years after teenage Henrietta Volt and her mother fled their family home on Fowler Island on Lake Erie, Henrietta receives a call from her estranged half-sister Beatrice informing her that their father has passed away. The news comes with a desperate request: for Henrietta to return to Fowler. When Henrietta reluctantly agrees, she is drawn back into the curse that has afflicted generations of Volt women on the island. The shifting timelines and multiple narrators can be confusing at first, but the reader should get acclimatized pretty quickly to this complex updating of many beloved Gothic tropes.

The Strange

Nathan Ballingrud

Saga Press, 290 pages, $36.99

Nathan Ballingrud has gifted us with two of the finest collections of short horror fiction in the last 10 years — “North American Lake Monsters” and “Wounds: Six Stories from the Border of Hell” — so expectations are perhaps preternaturally high for “The Strange,” his first novel. Set in an alternate historical timeline in which Mars was colonized in the late 19th century, “The Strange” transports readers to a Martian settlement in 1931 that had contact with Earth several years earlier. There, 14-year-old Anabelle Crisp embarks on a dangerous journey to retrieve a voice recording of her mother, who left Mars on the last transport ship to Earth. The eerie Martian setting and its feral frontier communities play to all of Ballingrud’s strengths and will evoke feelings of genuine awe and terror. Anabelle is less satisfying as a protagonist; her lack of experience, cockiness and bad decision-making inexplicably inspire loyalty from the novel’s far more interesting secondary cast of desperate frontier men and women. Mars is the real hero of “The Strange,” and it is not easily forgotten.

The Spite House

Johnny Compton

Tor Nightfire, 260 pages, $23.99

Eunice Houghton is an elderly heiress so terrified of a family curse that she offers a six-figure salary to anyone who can prove that a house on her property — the “spite house” of the title — is haunted. What Eunice plans to do with that evidence is irrelevant to Eric Ross, a father of two girls on the run from a recent family tragedy who agrees to move into the spite house. The mysterious residence soon obliges Eric with all the evidence of the supernatural he needs; it also works its malevolent power on his youngest daughter. A satisfying haunted house story that, like so much good American horror fiction, probes the country’s deep historical wounds.

James Grainger is the curator of “The Veil” on Substack.

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