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So you want to dive into some horror graphic novels but you don't know where to start? Or you've read some graphic novels and are looking for some more to sink your teeth into? Well here are some that I've personally read and love. And I've thrown in a few that are on my tbr as well.
Bad Dreams in the Night--this one takes urban legends and turns them into fun, fresh, beautifully drawn stories.
Uzumaki--I started with this Junji Ito manga and it completely sucked me in. This was my first every graphic novel and I will never not recommended it!
Beneath The Trees Where Nobody Sees--Think Dexter meets animal crossing. This one is so much fun!
The Me You Love In The Dark--A struggling artist rents a haunted house for inspiration...
Wytches--A family starts fresh in a new town to get away from the tragedy haunting their daughter. But the wytches are coming...
TBR
Beautiful Darkness--dark fairytale
Saint Catherine--religious horror/possession
Wait Til Helen Comes--sisterhood and creepy ghosts
The Pit--Fresh start, folklore, rural setting
The Autumnal-Small town, fall focused, folk
Fruiting Bodies--Trip gone wrong, nature
Double Walker-- Trip gone wrong, Murder
Nocturnos--a collection of stories set at night
What are some of your favorite graphic novels?
Hi folks!
The year is almost up, here’s my last bookish roundup! All books by BIPOC authors with BIPOC MCs.
A Witch’s Guide to Magical Innkeeping by Sangu Mandanna
Cosy, cute, found family, zombie rooster. My top BIPOC read of the year, and I blurbed the proof!
Red City by Marie Lu
Rival alchemists, one Chinese, one Indian. An incredible fantasy world with high stakes and a heart wrenching romance.
(S)kin by Ibi Zoboi
A verse novel about Caribbean fire witches, family secrets, and two teenage girls trying to survive their inner nature.
The Buffalo Hunter Hunter by Stephen Graham Jones
An incredible indigenous historical vampire book, the writing is dense but impeccable.
Wicked Flavors by Azalea Crowley
An autistic doll collector strikes a supernatural deal a mysterious antique dealer with a cane (both are also mixed heritage). Absolute carnage ensues.
Dulhaniyaa by Talia Bhatt.
A Desi lesbian romance with a transfemme love interest. Dancing, romance and bonkers Bollywood vibes.
Songs for Ghosts by Clara Kumagai.
A queer Japanese boy finds a century old diary of a woman who sings for ghosts. Beautiful Madam Butterfly retelling.
Katabasis by R.F. Kuang
Two PHD students, one Chinese, travel to academic hell to find their supervisor. It’s basically one long in-joke/nod to academia, which I enjoyed, but definitely not for everyone!
Here to Slay by Radhika Sanghani
Buffy but with sapphic British-Indian demon slayers. SO fun.
Marigold Mind Laundry by Junguen Yun
A bittersweet, melancholy Korean fantasy about a lonely immortal woman opening a laundry to wash away people’s bad memories, finding a new family along the way.
Happy New Year everyone!
Disco x
my bookclub (diverSCIFI your reading) is making a comeback for 2026!! please vote on our first book of the year and i’m so excited to read with you all🧚
book options:
a song of legends lost by m. h. ayinde
jade city by fonda lee
the gilded abyss by rebecca thorne
to be taught, if fortunate by becky chambers
tbh i don’t even know which one to vote for!
Hi my friends!
I can't wait for book club tomorrow night at 8pm Eastern! Keep an eye on this space for the link sent tomorrow, and I'll also post it in the Discord.
Time to choose our January book! 'The Team' tier members are encouraged to vote on the month's pick, and the winner will be revealed January 2nd.
Maine Characters by Hannah Orenstein
Every summer, Vivian Levy and Lucy Webster spend a month with their father at his lake house — separately. Raised in New York City, Vivian is an ambitious sommelier with a secret that could derail her future. Lucy grew up in a tiny Maine town, where she now teaches high school English while watching her marriage unravel. They’ve never met. While Lucy envied her half-sister from afar, their father kept Vivian in the dark.
When Vivian arrives at the lake to spread his ashes and sell his cabin, she's shocked to find Lucy there, awaiting his return. In an ideal world, they’d help each other through their grief. Instead, forced to spend the summer together, they fight through a storm of suspicion and hostility to untangle the messy truth about their parents’ pasts. While Lucy is desperate to hold onto the house, Vivian is scrambling after a betrayal. After thirty years apart, is it too late for them to be a family?
Broken Country by Clare Leslie Hall
Beth and her gentle, kind husband Frank are happily married, but their relationship relies on the past staying buried. But when Beth’s brother-in-law shoots a dog going after their sheep, Beth doesn’t realize that the gunshot will alter the course of their lives. For the dog belonged to none other than Gabriel Wolfe, the man Beth loved as a teenager—the man who broke her heart years ago. Gabriel has returned to the village with his young son Leo, a boy who reminds Beth very much of her own son, who died in a tragic accident.
As Beth is pulled back into Gabriel’s life, tensions around the village rise and dangerous secrets and jealousies from the past resurface, this time with deadly consequences. Beth is forced to make a choice between the woman she once was, and the woman she has become.
Before I Forget by Tory Henwood Hoen
Call it inertia. Call it a quarter-life crisis. Whatever you call it, Cricket Campbell is stuck. Despite working at a zeitgeist-y wellness company, the twenty-six-year-old feels anything but well. Still adrift after a tragedy that upended her world a decade ago, she has entered early adulthood under the weight of a new burden: her father’s Alzheimer’s diagnosis.
When Cricket’s older sister Nina announces it is time to move Arthur from his beloved Adirondack lake house into a memory-care facility, Cricket has a better idea. In returning home to become her father’s caretaker, she hopes to repair their strained relationship and shake herself out of her perma-funk. But even deeply familiar places can hold surprises.
As Cricket settles back into the family house at Catwood Pond―a place she once loved, but hasn’t visited since she was a teenager―she discovers that her father possesses a rare gift: as he loses his grasp of the past, he is increasingly able to predict the future. Before long, Arthur cements his reputation as an unlikely oracle, but for Cricket, believing in her father’s prophecies might also mean facing the most painful parts of her history. As she begins to remember who she once was, she uncovers a vital truth: the path forward often starts by going back.
Atmosphere by Taylor Jenkins Reid
Joan Goodwin has been obsessed with the stars for as long as she can remember. Thoughtful and reserved, Joan is content with her life as a professor of physics and astronomy at Rice University and as aunt to her precocious niece, Frances. That is, until she comes across an advertisement seeking the first women scientists to join NASA’s space shuttle program. Suddenly, Joan burns to be one of the few people to go to space.
Selected from a pool of thousands of applicants in the summer of 1980, Joan begins training at Houston’s Johnson Space Center, alongside an exceptional group of fellow candidates: Top Gun pilot Hank Redmond and scientist John Griffin, who are kind and easygoing even when the stakes are highest; mission specialist Lydia Danes, who has worked too hard to play nice; warmhearted Donna Fitzgerald, who is navigating her own secrets; and Vanessa Ford, the magnetic and mysterious aeronautical engineer, who can fix any engine and fly any plane.
As the new astronauts become unlikely friends and prepare for their first flights, Joan finds a passion and a love she never imagined. In this new light, Joan begins to question everything she thinks she knows about her place in the observable universe.
Then, in December of 1984, on mission STS-LR9, it all changes in an instant.
Hi folks,
It’s finally time! Here’s my list of my favourite queer reads this year. I’ll be doing another post soon with my top BIPOC reads!
Seven Recipes for Revolution by Ryan Rose
Food magic, queer normative, angry revolution, eat the rich!!
This is my top pick from the whole year.
The Chromatic Fantasy by H.A.
Runaway nun becomes a transmasc highwayman, meets another transmasc highwayman, shenanigans
A Gentleman’s Gentleman by TJ Alexander
A transmasc Earl who doesn’t want a valet but gets a handsome valet and regrets everything (but not really)
Tradwife by TC Parker
Queer investigator looks into unsolved murders in a Tradwife community, everyone’s a suspect, fictional true crime
Of Monsters and Mainframes by Barbara Truelove
Monsters in space, kinda queer AI, more found family!
Coffin Moon by Keith Rosson
A brutal vampire revenge thriller. A man and his basics track down an evil queer vampire. I was shocked and horrified and hooked.
The Prospects by KT Hoffman
An MM baseball romance with a transmasc MC. Do I understand baseball? No. Did it make me happy cry? Yes!
The Saint of Heartbreak by Morgan Dante
Judas x Lucifer love story, very sad bois, slowest of slow burns, literally thousands of years
Self Made Boys by Anne-Marie McLemore
The Great Gatsby but they’re both transmasc, the romance, oh the romance
The Gentle Art of Fortune Hunting by KJ Charles
A regency MM romance that will make you swoon. They were SO protective of each other!
Do share your favourites in the comments!
Much love,
Disco x
Welcome back to a Director’s Cut Review. Today’s book
under the knife is A Veritable Household Pet by Viggy Parr Hampton.
Title: A Veritable Household Pet
Author: Viggy Parr Hampton
Page Count: 336
Genre: Horror
Subgenre: Domestic, Medical
Themes/Tropes: Lobotomies, Sisterhood, Loss of autonomy, Mental health, medical abuse
Series? No but also 😉
Setting: 1960s/70s
Other Works by this author: A Cold Night for Alligators, Much Too Vulgar, The Rotting Room
Let's talk about this book. As always, I'll do my best to keep this review spoiler free for you all.
The book follows two sisters as they recall their tragic upbringing. Darla developed emetophobia--the fear of vomiting-- at a young age. By age eleven her parents were unable to handle her any more, so her father decided a lobotomy was the next step. This set off the chain of horrible events that follow in the book. Darla nearly died after the lobotomy--which at this point in time were nearly unheard of being practiced by medical professionals anymore. Her sister, Ellie, wound up having to care for Darla often due to the lack of effort her parents applied to the "new" Darla.
The story is told in alternating Povs. Decades later, Darla has asked Ellie to transcribe her life. After the lobotomy, Darla was never able to write again. She wanted a record of what she could remember. Ellie adds in her own thoughts and memories as she transcribes Darla's words.
This story is beautiful yet tragic. The feeling I got while reading this book reminded me of Tiffany McDaniel's The Savage Side. This book is brutal. It doesn't shy away from tragedy.
I can see some people not wanting to label this as horror. But to that I say this: Horror is subjective. We all perceive things differently. What scares me may not scare you. This book focuses on "real" horror. People had lobotomies done against their will. Many were never the same after the procedure. This book shows the tragedy of this horrible procedure that was once labeled a cure for neurosis. I'm a firm believer in the scariest kind of horror is the kind that happens everyday.
In this book we see parental negligence. We see medical professionals abuse their power. We see a young girl lose her autonomy. We see a girl have to make sacrifices and help raise her sister--a job her parents should be doing.
I'll drop a few content warnings here: Rape, Murder, Suicide.
I gave this book 4.5 stars.
Be sure to check it out when it releases on 1.28.26.
You can preorder the book down below. Be sure to check out more of Hampton's work! She is a fantastic writer.
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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!
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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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