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Hi team,
so as you know the December Revenge BookClub pick was The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones. As it’ll be a live chat discussion and it’s also the holiday season, I propose that we schedule a slot in the first week of January for the chat on discord! I hope this will suit everyone looking to join in - so excited for our very first club chat! I know some people have finished the book already, and others are planning to start it closer to the end of December - I’m just finishing up Lightbringer then I’ll be straight on it!
Ed x
Sliding into The Christmas Ring by Karen Kingsbury, I immediately felt a tug in my chest. Vanessa's aching hope for her family’s heirloom, the ring that’s carried generations of courage, hit me right in the feels. As a military widow searching for something precious she once lost, her journey is tender, raw, and filled with that hesitant, fluttery spark of new possibility. Enter Ben: antique shop co-owner, secret sweetheart energy, and the man whose father accidentally possesses the very ring Vanessa has spent years longing for. Watching their friendship bloom into romance while a five-figure secret loomed over them like a Christmas ornament ready to shatter? I was riveted. And extremely stressed. But in a festive way.
Then I jumped over to A Royal Christmas Wedding by Rachel Hauck, where heartbreak, royal pageantry, and unresolved longing swirl together like the world’s most emotional snow globe. Avery returning to Brighton Kingdom after Colin broke her heart five years ago? Oh, I was seated. The tension between them practically crackled through the pages of regret, love, uncertainty, all wrapped up in royal expectations and family duty. I kept whispering, “Just kiss already,” like a fully deranged Christmas fairy. Watching Avery wrestle with her future, and Colin finally realizing he can’t outrun his heart, felt like the literary equivalent of hearing church bells right before the big dramatic wedding climax.
And because I was clearly in a “let’s feel everything at once” mood, I dove into On the Way to Christmas by Sheila Roberts, and each novella felt like a warm mug of cocoa handed to me by someone who gets holiday chaos. Darby trying and failing and trying again to fix her past? Relatable. Willow’s heartbreak turned train trip comedy-of-healing? Adorable. Kacey caught between city lights and small-town sweetness and Drew? Classic, comforting, irresistible. Each story felt like stepping into a cozy living room where the tree lights glow just right, and someone quietly hands you a cookie because you look like you need it.
Reading all three together made me feel wrapped in romance, redemption, nostalgia, and enough twinkle lights to power a small town. It’s the kind of holiday reading that makes you believe in serendipity, forgiveness, and the magic of showing up at the right moment, preferably with cookies.
❓️So what about you? If you could star in your own Christmas romance, would you want (A) a royal reunion, (B) a festive small-town makeover, or (C) a serendipitous run-in at an antique shop that changes everything?

Scroll down for the Jan-July Picks and how they each fulfill prompts of the challenge!
If you’ve been following me for awhile (@thisstoryaintover on YouTube, Instagram, TikTok), then you may remember way back in 2021 when I started the Read in Colour Book Club. It had been my attempt (while working my 9-5 in publishing) to combat the overwhelming racism both within the publishing industry behind-the-scenes, but also in the books published, read, and spoken about by the popular masses and even on booktube, bookstagram, and later booktok. The book club had us reading 1 book each month, didn’t matter the genre, but they were all by authors of colour.
It’s been four years since then and a lot has changed. The way I talk about diversity in publishing & books has changed—I’m more direct and take less nonsense—and my career trajectory has changed. I left corporate publishing, and I was able to start my own indie publishing imprint, Boundless Press (under Bindery Books). We got to publish our first title, Dust Settles North by Deena ElGenaidi on September 30th, 2025.
And in the midst of all this change, I knew that the book club needed a change as well. I renamed it the “Boundless Book Club” to align better with my imprint and to keep it all under the same umbrella. I moved the book club to our community Discord for discussion, and in 2026, I’m introducing a new change—we will additionally be reading 1 nonfiction with each fiction book pick.
The book club will also help you fulfill the prompts of the Anti Brain Rot Reading Challenge that I announced earlier this month.
If you would like to join the club:
head to boundless.binderybooks.com
click “Join for Free” in the top right corner, click “sign in” with your preferred method, create an account
head to boundless.binderybooks.com/account — connect your discord account
navigate back to boundless.binderybooks.com — click the discord icon under my profile pic
You should now have access to all the channels in the discord to chat about the books in-depth :)
Book Club Picks for January-July
I have listed below each book, what prompt(s) they fulfill for the Anti Brain Rot Reading Challenge!
*If you purchase the books through the Bookshop links, I will earn affiliate income! I appreciate your support <3
JANUARY

FICTION: Capitalists Must Starve by Park Seolhyun, translated by Anton Hur | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills the Literary Fiction, Translated, and Not in America prompts
NONFICTION: Capitalism: A Ghost Story by Arundhati Roy | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills the History/Politics, and Not in America prompts
FEBRUARY

FICTION: The Blueprint by Rae Giana Rashad | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills the Black author who is ALIVE, Science Fiction, and Historical Fiction prompts
NONFICTION: Cobalt Red: How the Blood of the Congo Powers Our Lives by Siddharth Kara | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills the History/Politics prompt
MARCH

FICTION: Immaculate Conception by Ling Ling Huang | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills Horror, Science Fiction, Literary Fiction prompts
NONFICTION: Empire of AI: Dreams and Nightmares in Sam Altman’s OpenAI by Karen Hao | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills Nonfiction Science, and Politics prompts
APRIL

FICTION: The Dream Hotel by Laila Lalami | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills SWANA, Science Fiction, Literary Fiction prompts
NONFICTION: Perfect Victims and the Politics of Appeal by Mohammed El-Kurd | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills SWANA, and Memoir/biography prompts
MAY

FICTION: Burn the Sea by Mona Tewari | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills Fantasy prompt
Reminder of the PREORDER CAMPAIGN. You can submit your receipts here to enter to win one of the prize bundles!!
NONFICTION: Border and Rule: Global Migration, Capitalism, and the Rise of Racist Nationalism by Harsha Walia | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills History/Politics prompt
JUNE

FICTION: The Bruising of Qilwa by Naseem Jamnia | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills SWANA, LGBTQIAP+, and Fantasy prompt
NONFICTION: This Queer Arab Family: An Anthology by LGBTQ+ Arab Writers Edited by Elias Jahshan | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills SWANA, LGBTQIAP+, and Anthology prompt
JULY

FICTION: Hunchback by Saou Ichikawa | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills Translated, Disability Rep, and Not in America prompts
NONFICTION: Disability Visibility: First-Person Stories from the Twenty-first Century Edited by Alice Wong | Goodreads | Storygraph | Bookshop
Fulfills Anthology, and Disability Rep prompts
I will announced the August to December picks in a couple more months so not to fear! Can’t wait to read with you in 2026! :)
Hi and welcome to my little writing nook. Being a member grants you access to short stories like this!
This one is a found footage Christmas short! Hope you enjoy!
...
Below you will find a transcript of a video tape containing the last known moments of the Shultz family. The tape was discovered underneath the Shultz’s next door neighbors tree, wrapped as a present addressed to their daughter. Bloody fingerprints were found on the wrapping.
Blood was found in the Shultz’s home. No bodies have been located.
Play tape
The camera pans in and out of focus until the image of a Christmas tree comes into view. Presents are carefully placed on the skirt beneath the tree. Ornaments and tinsel decorate the branches.
Susan: Did you get it working, Mike?
Mike: Yeah. Gonna capture everything on this.
Susan: Why don’t you capture yourself setting the table. It’ll be dinner soon.
Mike: Yes Mrs. Clause.
The camera turns and captures a woman wearing a red, ugly Christmas sweater. Her brunette hair is curled, draped over her shoulders. She holds a glass dish in her mitted hands.
Susan: Getting my good side?
Mike: They’re all good.
Susan rolls her eyes and places the dish on the table. The camera cuts out. Seconds later static fills the black void. An image slowly fades into view. A family of four sitting around the tree opening presents. Orange flames flicker in the background from the brick fireplace. Red and white stocking hang from the mantle. The names Susan, Mike, Todd, and Henry are stitched into the fabric.
Mike: Now boys, only two presents each tonight. Gotta save some excitement for what Santa brings tomorrow.
Todd: Henry's getting coal!
Henry: Am not!
Todd: Are too!
The boys begin sticking their tongues out at one another.
Susan: Boys.Boys.Please calm down or I think Santa may change his mind and give you both coal.
Mike: Henry open your present first.
Todd: Not fair! I want to go first.
Todd crosses his arms and purses his lips into a pout.
Mike: Keep it up bucko and I'll let Henry open both of his first.
Todd lets out a sigh but relents. Henry gleefully rips the wrapping paper off the present revealing a rectangular box underneath. He throws the top open and peels back the thin paper only to have a frown take the place of his smile.
Henry: Pajamas? I don't want stupid clothes.
Susan: Boys, if you're going to continue having sour attitudes I think we'll stop opening presents and just go to bed.
Henry and Todd: NO!
Mike: Then let's remember to show some gratitude, okay?
The boys sigh and nod their heads. Todd proceeds to open his gift to find it's also a set of matching pajamas.
Mike: Alright Henry, your turn again.
The boy opens his present slower this time. Once the paper is peeled back, what looks to be a vhs tape sits in the boy's hand.
Susan: Wait...Mike?
Mike: What in the world?
Henry: Is this a movie?
The camera cuts out again before voices can be heard. No video can be seen for the next minute.
Susan: Oh my God. Where did that tape come from? Mike we need to call the police. You saw what...what happened...
Mike: It's not real. It can't be, Susan. Someone pulled a horrible prank or something.
Susan: Mike. Someone came into our house and put that gift under the tree. Someone wanted our son to see that...that snuff film.
Mike: Look, let's just finish opening presents and then I'll call Andrew. He's on the force and will know what to do. We can wait until the boys go to bed. No need to worry them.
Susan: I don't know...I'm worried.
Mike: Don't worry. I won't let anything bad happen to you.
Static fills the screen for a brief second before the familiar scene of the boys in front of the tree comes back.
Susan: Uh okay. Todd. Time for your second gift.
Henry: When do I get to watch my movie?
Mike: Maybe tomorrow kiddo. It's getting late and we gotta get to bed before Santa comes.
Just then a loud thud can be heard from somewhere above. Dust expels from the chimney.
Todd: SANTA!
Susan and Mike exchange worried glances.
Unknown: Ho. Ho. Ho.
Henry: It really is Santa!
Mike: Boys it's time to go.
Another loud thud can be heard and something falls out of the chimney. It's a wooden log still on fire as it rolls toward the carpet. Sitting at the bottom of the chimney is a giant, brown sack. Surprisingly the flames do not ignite the lumpy bag. The bag is wet at the bottom with a dark liquid staining the tanned color.
Another loud noise is followed by black boots appearing by the flames.
Mike: Susan, we need to go now!
Mike grabs his two boys by the hands and pulls them out of frame just as a pale hand grabs the stone brick of the fireplace. Sharp claws are where the fingernails should be.
Unknown: Naughty! Naughty!
Susan tries to get to her feet but it's too late. The rest of the figure emerges from the fireplace. The figure is dressed similar to Santa, wearing red and white from head to toe. But the similarities stop there. Grey, leathery skin sits in place of the usual pale color of Santa. A long mane of black hair sits on top the creatures head along with two long horns.
Unknown: Where are the naughty boys?
Susan screams as the creature grabs her by the throat and lifts her into the air. A long tongue slithers past its lips. The pale tongue brushes against Susan's cheek.
Unknown: You taste like fear.
A large grin spreads across the creature face, revealing rows of pointed teeth. Before Susan can utter another sound the figure clamps its mouth over her face. A jerk of his head makes Susan go limp. Blood sprays everywhere.
Mike: Susan!
Through the blood droplets on the camera, the creature can be seen tossing Susan aside. Her lifeless body lands in front of the camera.
Screams and loud thumps can be heard in the distance. Eventually the camera goes black.
It's time for some more book recs and today I'm talking about found footage.
The Blair Witch Project took audiences by storm upon its release. It was released at the perfect time before the internet and cell phones. The marketing campaign made you believe that these three actors weren't actually actors. That the film you're seeing was actually found footage and these three actors were missing.
I love books that are able to take that found footage feeling and apply it to page. The below books are all ones that I've read and would recommend.
Found: An Anthology of Found Footage Horror edited by Andrew Cull and Gabino Iglesias--An anthology of eighteen stories all dealing with some type of found footage horror. If you've read Clay McLeod Chapman's Wake Up and Open Your Eyes, you may be a bit familair with his story in this collection. The story he wrote for this one "The Spew of News" is what he used to turn Wake Up And Open Your Eyes into a novel! This one also has another collection of Found Footage Horror as well. Found 2:More Stories Of Found Footage Horror.
FantasticLand by Mike Bockoven-- This one is an all time favorite of mine. I will highly suggest listening to it as an audiobook! The narrators really brought the novel to life. It's told in interviews of survivors who spent a month trapped in an amusement park after a hurricane left them stranded. It's very Lord Of The Flies esq.
Night Film by Marisha Pessl--If you know me you know I LOVE this book. It follows a journalist who investigates a cult film director after the mysterious death of the director's daughter. This one has tons of mixed media in it. From newspaper articles to website pages, the media makes the story feel very meta.
Wylding Hall by Elizabeth Hand--Interviews of members of a former band tell of their haunting time at Wylding Hall. One of the band members disappeared while at the manor and there were some pretty spooky instances several of the band members experienced. This book is great for fans of Daisy Jones and the Six but if you wanted a sprinkle of spooks.
Rules For Vanishing by Kate Alice Marshall-- Don't let the YA tag fool you, this book is SCARY. It follows a group of teens who choose to participate in a deadly legend in search of their missing friend. Once a year a road appears in the forest and at the end of it is the ghost of Lucy Gallows. You must play her deadly games and try to survive.
And a few more fantastic mentions because this category is just too good.
The Weight of Blood, The Lost Village, Devolution, and Universal Harvester.
What is your favorite Found Footage Horror Book?
Also, I wanted to let you all know exciting things are coming for my Inner Sanctum members. If you're able to, consider upgrading! It would mean a lot to me and grant you access to many more features!
Hi friend!
There are SO many ways to connect this month in our Discord! Christmas season always comes with full schedules, so we wanted to ensure you had a few options to slow down and cozy up. 💕 I hope to see you at one or more of these!
TONIGHT @ 8pm - Join mod, PlantyPanda, for a cozy evening chat! No topic is off limits, we'll just spend some meaningful time together. RSVP
THURSDSAY, DEC. 11th @ 10am CT - Have some wrapping to do, tree to tinsel, or just need some company during your workday? Join us for an hour or two of co-working! RSVP
MONDAY, DEC. 15th @ 7pm CT - Join mod, Ray, for a holiday movie night here in the Discord! We'll be watching a favorite, Muppet Christmas Carol. Can't wait to ring in the holiday cheer with you! RSVP
WEDNESDAY, DEC. 17th @ 7pm CT - (SBC Member Exclusive) Join the Second Breakfast Club for a cozy catch up night! We'll hang out for an hour and catch up on life. RSVP
FRIDAY, DEC. 19th @ 7pm CT - Come hang with Crispy Biology and bedazzle some books! We'll do some diamond art on the cover of your book of choice. This could be for you or a present for someone for the holidays! RSVP
MONDAY, JAN. 5th @ 7:30pm - (Paid Member Exclusive) This is the BIG ONE! Let's celebrate the best books we read all year together and share the hits and misses. Can't wait! RSVP
Back with everyone's favorite series (Okay, it's the second post!)
Here are 10 more horror (and horror adjacent) books, I can't wait for coming out in 2026!
See The First Ten Recommendations Here
The Body by Bethany C. Morrow, 2/10/26, a supernatural horror following a cracking marriage
Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward, 2/24/26, Rocky Mountain survival horror (Yasssss!)
Bloodfire, Baby, by Elrinie Carson, 2/17/26, maternal gothic, motherhood and a centuries old terror.
The Fourth Princess by Janie Chang, 2/10/26, Chinese Gothic, Shanghai Mansion (say less!)
The Darkness Greeted Her by Christina Ferko, 2/3/26, Yellowjackets meets Smile. girls stalked in the Appalachian wilderness by a monster that feeds on fears!
She Made Herself A Monster by Anna Kovatcheva, 2/10/26, 19th century Bulgaria gothic with a traveling con artist (already sold)
Bed Rot Baby by Wendy Dalrymple, 2/10/26, a pre Y2k sugar baby selling stolen goods online gets attacked and decides to lay in bed and rot
Small Town Slasher by Stephanie Rose, 3/3/26, a disabled horror fanatic stays at a themed horror cabin in this meta slasher
The Fourth Wife by Linda Hamilton, 3/31/26, The Hacienda meets Sister Wives (wild comps), historical gothic horror, Mormon, Utah
The Fox and The Devil by Kiersten White, 3/10/26, gothic fantasy, obsession with an immortal serial killer
Which ones are you adding to your TBR?
It's time for another director's cut review. Today I'll be talking about House of Splinters by Laura Purcell.
Title: House of Splinters
Author: Laura Purcell
Page Count: 368
Genre: Horror
Subgenre: Gothic Horror, Historical Horror, Haunted House/Objects
Themes/Tropes: Fresh Start, Creepy Figurines, Kids who see/hear things, Family Drama, Pregnancy
Series? Yes, Prequel to The Silent Companions
Setting: Victorian English Countryside Estate
Other Works By This Author: The Shape of Darkness, The Corset, The Poison Thread, The Whispering Muse
House of Splinters is a prequel to Purcell's 2017 novel, The Silent Companions. It has a similar premise to The Silent Companions, but definitely explores some new avenues. It also delves deeper into the family's dark history. Speaking of diving in, let's dive into this review.
First, let me give you a quick run down of what the novel is about. It follows Belinda Bainbridge who moves to her husband's family estate--The Bridge. Her father-in-law recently passed away at the estate, leaving it to her husband, Wilfred. A very pregnant Belinda and her five-year-old son Freddy travel to the manor expecting a new start. But the house has other plans. The garden is in ruins, the family is struggling financially, and the locals are not happy with the renovations being done on the grounds. To top it all off, life-like wooden figures keep popping up everywhere.The figures expression seem to change and they seem to move on their own. And Wilfred's estranged brother appears and Belinda begins questioning everything she thought she knew about her husband.
Get ready for a fantastic slow burn horror. The build definitely pays off in the end. These companions are absolutely terrifying. They don't have to say anything. All they have to do is exist. It's like my favorite kind of scare in the movies--something lurking in the background where only the viewer can see.
I loved the exploration into Wilfred's family. There is a lot of dark history there. Not everyone is who they seem to be. Readers of The Silent Companions will be familiar with the Anne Bainbridge diary and the horrors it uncovers. This book dives a bit deeper into what happened and how those events affect Belinda and her family.
Purcell's writing is guaranteed to suck you in. She's built such a tense atmosphere.
While I loved The Silent Companions more, this book still held me captive the entire time. I loved it!
I cannot thank netgalley and the publisher enough for allowing me to read this one early.
Hey hi hello! Apologies for such a late send out of December's Inner Circle perks form! I am officially finished with finals (I think I did well, but won't hear back for another week or two), and am playing catch up on everything that fell off my radar during dead week and finals.
To get your December Personalized Book Recs fill out THIS FORM.
Due to the fact that I have fallen massively behind on book reviews (both for y'all and for publishers) I am temporarily pausing the nominations of books for me to read and review. My goal for winter break is to catch up on reviews, after which I will hopefully reopen that aspect of Inner Circle perks. Every review I do post will go up on here as usual, but since I'm expecting several over the course of the month, I won't notify y'all by email every time--if you want a notification for book reviews, react to the message in #welcome in the discord server to get tagged on discord when posts go live.
To make the lack of this perk up to you, I've got a book round up of Holiday romance novels (58 books--mostly Christmas, some Hannukah, two New Years) ft disability representation coming your way soon! I'm still working on the graphics, but you can expect the post for sure by the first day of Hannukah (12/15).
Happy Holidays!
~ Kaley
Stuff Celine Reads
Celine
collector of books, words and stories 🍂🗝️
Kaden Love
Author and reader
Welcome you beloved Imps! If you like dark fantasy, insane sci-fi, or my novels about cyberpunk tooth-eating vampires, you're in the right place.
DocoftheDarkArts
Bob Stuntz
📖 Reader, former ER doctor prescribing fantasy, horror, and sci-fi. 📚 Bookish thoughts, reviews, and recs
The Page Ladies Book Club
The Page Ladies
Welcome to The Page Ladies Book Club! A place to share our book clubs and our individual reads! So come dive into our reviews, join the discussion, and find your next great read!
Alysha Fortune Reads
Alysha
Hi friends! I have been a fantasy/scifi reader my whole life and I firmly believe in reading, and honesty when it comes to books! I love sharing my love for my favorites and I get so much joy finding a book someone else will love!
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