
10 Great Gothic Thrillers That Will Keep You Up at Night
Horror is having a moment. Once confined largely to Halloween, or at least to October, 'spooky season' has evolved into a monthslong phenomenon — and our hunger for the frightful doesn't stop there.
At a time when real life can feel like a nightmare, a collective turn toward the ghoulish and the ghastly might seem counterintuitive, but the Gothic genre has always offered a space to examine the darkest corners of the human psyche. The supernatural happenings that scare us out of our skin are — like the portrait of Dorian Gray — reflections of our own evil as much as anything else. These novels, both old and new, will make you shiver with delight one moment and recoil in hair-raising horror the next.
Rebecca
In this master class of psychological horror, the naïve second wife of Maxim de Winter grapples with the legacy of his first spouse, Rebecca. Du Maurier makes good use of many of the usual tropes of the Gothic genre, especially uncanny doubling: Relentlessly and unfavorably compared to the Manderley estate's bewitching former mistress, the nameless narrator is pushed to the brink of sanity by the sinister housekeeper, Mrs. Danvers. Secrets bob to the surface like drowning victims from the deep until nobody — not even the reader — can easily separate the terrible truth from even more terrible fictions.
The Keep
This book has it all: castles, caves, childhood nightmares dragged back into the light. Grotesque and fantastic, 'The Keep' is one of Egan's more experimental novels, in which two cousins haunted by a childhood prank reunite in a remote village in Eastern Europe to turn its tumbledown castle into an alternative resort. ('The White Lotus' Season 4, anyone?) Egan's descriptions of the setting are elegant, whimsical and incredibly evocative, conjuring a rare and delightful tale of things that go bump in the night.
A Heart So White
In the late 1700s, many of the earliest Gothic writers turned to Shakespeare for inspiration. Two centuries later, the Spanish writer Marías took a page out of their book with 'Corazón tan blanco,' published in English as 'A Heart So White,' which borrows not only its title but also many of its major themes from 'Macbeth.' After their wedding, Juan, the narrator, and his young wife begin probing his father's shadowed past, and find blood and betrayal at every turn. As in 'Rebecca,' in this tale a new marriage exposes old family secrets and cycles of violence, but through a glass darkly. Author and narrator alike refuse easy moral judgments as past and present collapse in murky obscurity. Set in Spain and Cuba, 'A Heart So White' also shares with Shakespeare's Scottish play a lingering unease at the bloody legacies of Catholic dogma. But the real witchcraft in the novel is the language; even in translation, Marías's sinuous, elliptical prose unfolds like a troubled dream.
Earthlings
One of the strangest novels you will ever read, Murata's 'Earthlings' is impossible to categorize and just as difficult to describe. That's exactly what makes the book so delicious — and so disturbing. Murata's hairpin narrative style keeps readers so persistently off-balance that you'll feel like a Gothic heroine yourself, lost in a maze of blind corners, dead ends and mind-boggling moments. But the darkness lurking at the core of this modern fable about a girl who believes she is an alien is all too real and so eerily familiar that, when the shocking ending arrives, you might not know what to believe.
Fledgling
Like many of the best-known Gothic thrillers of centuries past, 'Fledgling' blends genres and bends morality with grisly determination. One part horror, one part science fiction and one part fantasy, this is a refreshingly freaky entry in the overworn category of vampire fiction. As sinister as they are seductive, Butler's bloodsuckers prey on human frailty as much as human flesh. The novel's protagonist, Shori, challenges — often violently — assumptions about race and power, sexuality and desire, and every ethical truth you thought you knew. Not for the faint of heart or weak of stomach, 'Fledgling' is a slim but sharp-toothed novel unjustly overlooked in Butler's oeuvre.
Sundial
Ward's sun-soaked 'Sundial" is Southwestern Gothic at its finest. Childhood horrors and bones long buried splinter into the present when Rob spirits her elder daughter away from their suburban neighborhood after the remains of house pets and local wildlife start turning up in her bedroom and the 12-year-old's 'silent fury' threatens her younger sister. Rob's strange and sinister childhood home offers no sanctuary, however: It harbors a dark history of child abuse, dubious animal experimentation and an unnamed evil slinking through the badlands like a snake.
The Cement Garden
The premise alone is goose bumps grim: After the death of their mother, four children decide to hide her body in a trunk of cement in their basement and fend for themselves rather than surrender to social workers and foster care. What follows is a twisted game of house where familiar familial relationships crumble and new ones take root like nasty black weeds. This one will make your skin crawl.
The Historian
In her fresh take on the vampire novel, Kostova reworks the Dracula legend with a historian's meticulous attention to detail. Following in the tradition of imperiled Gothic heroines, a young woman in 1970s Amsterdam finds herself in the clutches of malevolent forces as she tries to unravel the mystery of her mother's disappearance, which seems to be tied to the 15th-century reign of Vlad the Impaler and a sinister, supernatural legacy that stretches into her present. The sweeping scope of this aptly titled novel makes it perfect for a long dark evening, and for readers who like a side of folklore with their thrills and chills.
Child of God
A word of caution: Don't read this book on the bus, or the train, or anywhere else someone might be tempted to look over your shoulder. McCarthy follows in the footsteps of William Faulkner in this disquieting masterpiece of Southern Gothic horror, treading where few other authors dare. His characteristically sparse prose only makes this portrait of a necrophiliac serial killer haunting the hill country of eastern Tennessee that much more disturbing: Lester Ballard makes Norman Bates look like Beaver Cleaver.
Our Share of Night
If such a thing as a slow-burn thriller exists, this is it. Like 'The Historian,' Enríquez's dense danse macabre of a novel braids together fantasy, horror and historical fiction. Set in the 1980s and '90s, against the aftermath of Argentina's military dictatorship, 'Our Share of Night' reimagines the all-too-human evils of the world as a ravenous supernatural power known only as 'the Darkness,' which has spawned a secret society of rich, immortality-seeking devotees known as the Cult of the Shadow. The Darkness feeds on suffering and cruelty and, as this circuitous tale spins through the years and around the world, it finds more than enough acolytes to satisfy its gruesome appetite.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Miami Herald
12 hours ago
- Miami Herald
‘Not emotionally prepared' neighbors find ‘escape artist' pet lurking in garage
A pet owner's neighbors had a fright when they found an 'escape artist' hiding in their garage, Colorado officials said. Sophie, who is not 'your average sunbathing gecko,' is a very large Tegu lizard with 'confident swagger' that got out of her plexiglass enclosure after seeing a minor gap, according to a June 24 Facebook post by the Humane Society of the Pikes Peak Region. After bending the plexiglass like 'she was Dwayne 'The Rock' Johnson,'' she found her way into the home's backyard before slipping under the fence, the Colorado Springs animal shelter said. Sophie ended up in a neighbor's garage, hidden behind old Halloween decorations as she 'tried to lay low,' the shelter said. That's when the neighbor, 'not emotionally prepared' to see Sophie, found her next to their leaf blower, the shelter said. They 'kept their cool' and called animal law enforcement who responded to the home, the shelter said. The 'quick thinking' officer turned two trash lids into 'medieval shields' and managed to guide Sophie into a container without injury, the rescue said. She was taken to the shelter and the shelter posted her photo to their website in hopes her owner would see it, the post said. Eventually, Sophie's owner spotted her on the website and he 'rushed to the shelter,' the rescue said. When Sophie saw her owner, she 'immediately relaxed' and eventually the two went home, the shelter said. Although the shelter said they're grateful that she was reunited with her owner, they ask Sophia to 'stay put,' the post said. Colorado Springs is about a 70-mile drive south of Denver.


Chicago Tribune
12 hours ago
- Chicago Tribune
Universal Studios ‘horror experience' planned near Chicago casino
NBCUniversal will open a horror-themed attraction across from Bally's Casino, Mayor Brandon Johnson announced Thursday afternoon in what would be the brand's first entertainment venue in the Midwest. The 'year-round immersive horror experience' will be titled Universal Horror Unleashed and sit in the vacant 114,000-square-foot building at 700 W. Chicago Ave., according to city officials. It is slated to open in 2027 and will receive tax credits from a state program. Johnson cast the development as one that 'will also uplift and revitalize a dynamic neighborhood.' 'This venue will not only bring growth with new visitors to this community, but it will also create 400 — 400 — permanent jobs for Chicagoans, which ultimately grows our local economy,' Johnson told reporters. 'I'm very excited about this announcement, and I have no doubt that fans of this genre will flock to our city for these memorable experiences.' Johnson's office said the project will offer haunted mazes, themed bars and restaurants as well as a shopping space with special branded merchandise, with construction scheduled to start early next year. The agreement includes incentives from the state's Economic Development for a Growing Economy, which grants annual corporate tax credits to businesses who decide to locate in Illinois. Qualifications depend on job creation and dollars invested, with the credit equal to half of the income tax withholdings of the new employees, or 75% if the project is located in an 'underserved area' in the census tract. More credits are available for covering training costs. City officials said the horror venue is expected to create more than 400 permanent jobs. 'Universal's decision to make such a significant investment in Illinois is a testament to the state's unmatched entertainment sector, renowned workforce and strong infrastructure,' Gov. JB Pritzker said in a statement. 'Universal choosing Illinois didn't happen by accident — we were proud to support this project through our EDGE incentive program, which has helped fortify a positive business climate that draws world-class companies to the state.' The project's announcement follows the first Universal Horror Unleashed opening in Las Vegas this August. Page Thompson, president of New Ventures at Universal Destinations & Experiences, said the project will be one that is 'deeply connected to this city and to our riverfront location' — and also provide 'bone-chilling scares.' 'It's all fear all year, because horror isn't just for Halloween,' Thompson said. 'Chicago is a great location. It's one of the biggest cities in the United States, obviously the third-largest tourism market in the country, and we've done some research and found that Chicago has pretty high affinity for horror concepts.'


Gizmodo
14 hours ago
- Gizmodo
Emma Stone May Be an Alien In the First Trailer for ‘Bugonia'
With films like Poor Things, The Favourite, The Lobster, and more, director Yorgos Lanthimos has become one of the most exciting directors working today. It's because he can take a relatively normal subject and turn it incredibly weird or take an incredibly weird subject and make it seem normal. We aren't quite sure which one of those his next film, Bugonia, is yet, but its first teaser all but assures us it's pure Yorgos. Opening wide on Halloween, Bugonia stars Emma Stone as a CEO who is kidnapped by two 'conspiracy theory-obsessed young men' played by Jesse Plemons and Aidan Delbis. These men believe that Stone is an alien who plans to take over the world. Is that true? Is it not? Watch the first teaser and make the decision for yourself. What I love about this teaser is that it gives us a decent sense of the setup to the movie, and only a tease of the madness that occurs later. If you saw this in a theater, unaware of what the movie was, you'd think it was just a kind of basic kidnapping/home invasion story. But no, not from Yorgos Lanthimos. Things seem to get weird and intense, and we have a feeling that Stone isn't an alien, but the fears of the men aren't wrong either. She probably does want to take over the world in some creepy, money-hungry way. She's just doing it as a human being. Or, you know, she is an alien, and things go really off the deep end. Bugonia was written by Will Tracy, who worked on HBO's Succession and did 2022's surprising horror film, The Menu. Both of those projects are about the evils of wealth and greed, so we'd imagine that follows suit here. Just with a lot of scared Emma Stone, whacked-out Jesse Plemons, and Yorgos controlling it all. The film opens in limited release October 24 before going wide on October 31. Want more io9 news? Check out when to expect the latest Marvel, Star Wars, and Star Trek releases, what's next for the DC Universe on film and TV, and everything you need to know about the future of Doctor Who.