Another by Paul Tremblay
Another (2025) by Paul Tremblay is his very first middle-grade horror after several fabulous adult novels with equally dark themes.
Wheaton Public Library
225 N. Cross St.
Wheaton, IL 60187
United States
Another (2025) by Paul Tremblay is his very first middle-grade horror after several fabulous adult novels with equally dark themes.
When I first read the 'schtick' for Titan of the Stars, I was completely hooked: Alien meets Titanic. That could either be completely terrible, or excitingly great.
This gothic horror, fairy-tale coming of age story is one of my favorite reads of 2025! The Lamb (2025) by Lucy Rose is a wonderfully written easy read but not easy to digest. I rooted for the main character, Little One, telling us her story of living in a cottage in the woods with her mother: a story of neglect, cannibalism, Sapphic love and growing up trying to find love in
Thomas Walsh is used to picking up the occasional odd job. When he accepts a job interpreting for an heiress who is mute by choice and uses sign language to communicate, he thinks it'll be an easy one: he has the experience growing up with a Deaf mother, after all. Sure, Vivienne's father keeps her on a short leash, won't let her out past sunset, and also kind of wants Thomas to follow her wherever she goes, but Thomas doesn't care about the weird family dynamics. He's just there for the money.
William by Mason Coile is a delightfully short and menacing techno-thriller taking readers through a single day in the life of a brilliant engineer, Henry, and his AI creation, William. Presenting William to guests for the first time goes terribly wrong.
Eowyn Ivey’s Black Woods, Blue Sky is a wonderfully written story, a fairy-folk tale of sorts, of a mother and daughter in the Alaskan wilderness. Emaleen, a chatty five year old girl, gets lost in the Alaskan forest and is reunited with her mother, Birdie, when she is rescued by Arthur, a quiet loner who rarely ventures into town.
Nick Cutter’s latest novel delivers some truly unsettling body horror. Set over a single, tension-filled day, the story follows Margaret, a teenage girl uncovering harrowing truths about her missing friend Charity. Her day leads to devastating revelations with far-reaching consequences and connections to millionaire tech pioneer, Rudyard Crate, whose childhood flashbacks are wild and horrifying.
Tananarive Due’s The Reformatory (2023) is a hauntingly beautiful masterpiece of historical fiction that lingers in your soul long after the final page. Set against the backdrop of a racially segregated South in 1930s Florida, the novel is both a riveting exploration of systemic injustice and a hallucinatory journey into the supernatural.
Imagine this, if you will, you and thirteen other contestants have been chosen to take part in a week-long game of 'Hide and Seek' in an abandoned amusement park ala Mr. Beast-style. Each day there are two participants that are taken out, the game is active from Dawn until Dusk, and every night you sleep alongside your fellow contestants forging alliances and creating rivalries. The sole winner earns $50,000, AND the game might even become televised so you have the potential to be an internet celeb just by playing.
If you love horror, an unreliable narrator and a story that makes you want to scream at the characters, We Used to Live Here is a perfect read. Fast paced and full of suspense, Marcus Kliewer has written a horror story about a queer married couple renovating their new hom
Josh Malerman (Bird Box) brings a realistic and scary imagining about every child’s nightmare- a very real and very scary monster in the closet. After the usual routine 'Good nights' from her parents, a voice oozes from the closet… “Can I go inside your heart,” says the Other Mommy to 8 year old Bela.