I picked up 'Our Hideous Progeny' on a whim after seeing it recommended in a bookish subreddit, and wow—what a delightful surprise! It’s this gorgeous blend of historical fiction, Gothic horror, and a fresh twist on the 'Frankenstein' legacy. If you’re into atmospheric storytelling with a feminist edge, this one’s a gem. The protagonist, Mary Sutherland, is such a compelling voice; her struggles as a marginalized woman in the 1850s scientific community feel painfully relevant even today. The way the author weaves real historical figures like Mary Anning into the narrative adds this layer of authenticity that I couldn’t get enough of.
What really hooked me, though, was the prose. It’s lush without being overwrought, like sipping a perfectly brewed cup of tea—every sentence feels intentional. The themes of ambition, ethics, and the cost of creation hit hard, especially if you’ve ever felt like an outsider chasing a dream. And that ending? No spoilers, but it lingered in my mind for days. If you’re craving something with teeth (both metaphorically and, well, literally in some scenes), this is your 2024 must-read. I’ve already pressed my copy into three friends’ hands, and they all texted me at midnight to scream about it.
2026-03-20 18:13:00
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Liliana just wanted to escape her past. Jarek Falcon had other plans.
He’s the heir to a mafia empire. She’s a girl with nothing to lose.
When Jarek’s obsession turns to cruelty, Liliana runs—straight into the arms of someone from her past. However, people change and when she discovers a sinister plan in the making, she finds herself running once again—straight to the streets.
Years later, Jarek finds her again. He needs an heir to claim his inheritance. She needs a way to a better life. Their deal is simple: a child in exchange for a lifetime of security.
But love complicates everything.
Jarek realizes too late that Liliana isn’t just a means to an end. She’s the one he can’t live without. The problem? She wants nothing to do with him.
Can he rewrite their story, or will his past destroy any chance of a future?
I was barely a young girl when I was sent to him to be trained as an assassin.
Marco didn't just turn me into a ruthless killer-he made me a woman.
I was his protégé.
He was my Master - of my mind, body, and soul.
But I wanted more.
I wanted to be HIS WOMAN.
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In a world where the moon shattered and the strong devoured the weak, Neoma Solstice is nothing. A scentless Null. A ghost. A mistake.
Until the day she saves a dying Lycan warrior with a touch, and her secret is revealed: she's Void-Born, the rarest mutation in existence. The same power that makes her invisible makes her invaluable—a living weapon that can cure the incurable Feral Rot plaguing the Lycan Ascendancy.
Captured and collared, Neoma is forced to serve as "Tether" to Unit Vanguard: four elite soldiers on the brink of madness. Barzil, the ruthless Commander who sees her as a mission. Wolfy, the cold Tactician who sees her as a puzzle. Viggo, the feral Berserker who sees her as salvation. Guller, the fallen Priest who sees her as redemption.
They own her contract. They control her life. They swear she's just a tool.
But tools don't make their masters kneel.
As Neoma's power grows, so does the threat she poses to the regime that enslaved her. When the prophesied Blood Moon rises, she'll have to choose: remain the Ascendancy's battery, or become the Void that devours them whole.
Some bonds are forged in blood. Some in magic. Theirs was forged in desperation—and it might be the only thing strong enough to save a dying world.
The Obsidian Covenant is a dark dystopian reverse harem romance featuring a morally gray FMC, four obsessive MLs, found family dynamics, enemies-to-lovers, rejected mate redemption, and a slow-burn that explodes into high heat. Perfect for fans of The Cruel Prince meets Den of Vipers in a post-apocalyptic wasteland.
No choosing. No apologies. No mercy.
In my past life, my selfish son stopped caring about my husband and me after marrying a woman who followed her mother's words like they were holy commandments.
In fact, he orchestrates an accident to kill my husband and me under the influence of his wife and her family. It's all so he can inherit our fortunes earlier than expected.
When I'm reborn, I look at my son, who's rotten to the core, and decide that I don't want him anymore!
The Mood Goddess Selene, immortal ruler of the werewolves, abandoned her celestial throne to live among her children, yearning to understand their pain and lead with compassion. She only wanted to be a better leader for them but what she got was cruelty and injustice. With her memory lost and no wolf. The Goddess lived as a slave until she was sold from pack to pack as a breeder, as she was the only one who could fall pregnant in the last nineteen years since she left the realm. When her memory returns and her wolf awakens, will she punish her children or will she have mercy on them.
Doctor Morgan was accused of murdering an eight year old girl and subjected for death penalty when found guilty. Angelic Morgan believed her father was innocent and started her investigation about the case. Same patterns of death cases were recorded long years ago and yet all investigations led to presumptions and the brutal killings remained unsolved. Now, she believed that it was not an error of medical practice but an unexplainable phenomenon where demonic manipulation could possibly exists. Contrary to this, a formulated chemical was discovered inside the dead body. Who was the murderer behind? Was it an invention of science? Or a manifestation of evil?
Just finished 'The Vile Thing We Created' last week, and wow—it’s one of those stories that clings to you like a shadow. The pacing is slow at first, but it builds this eerie atmosphere that pays off in the later chapters. The protagonist’s moral dilemmas felt uncomfortably real, especially when their choices started spiraling into chaos. If you’re into psychological horror with a side of existential dread, this’ll hit the spot. The ending left me staring at the ceiling for a solid hour, questioning everything.
That said, it’s not for everyone. The prose is dense, almost poetic, which I loved, but if you prefer fast-paced plots, it might feel like wading through molasses. Also, trigger warnings for body horror and emotional manipulation—it doesn’t shy away from the ugly stuff. But if you can stomach it, the book’s exploration of guilt and humanity is haunting in the best way.
I picked up 'That Hideous Strength' after devouring the first two books in C.S. Lewis's Space Trilogy, and it's a wild departure from the cosmic adventures of 'Out of the Silent Planet' and 'Perelandra.' This one dives into eerie, Earth-bound conspiracy vibes, blending dystopian sci-fi with sharp social satire. The pacing feels slower—more like a simmering thriller—and the allegory gets dense, but it's fascinating how Lewis critiques bureaucracy and ideological extremism through this eerie academic cabal.
Some folks find the shift in tone jarring, but I loved how it ties back to the trilogy’s themes of spiritual warfare. The characters are less 'heroic' and more flawed, which makes the moral dilemmas hit harder. If you enjoy Lewis’s philosophical tangents and don’t mind a darker, talkier narrative, it’s worth pushing through. Just don’t expect another space odyssey.
I adore 'Our Hideous Progeny' for its gothic vibes and Frankenstein-inspired themes, and if you’re craving more books with that eerie, scientific-reanimation-meets-literary-darkness feel, I’ve got some spine-tingling recommendations! First, 'The Dark Descent of Elizabeth Frankenstein' by Kiersten White is a brilliant retelling of Mary Shelley’s classic, but from Elizabeth’s perspective—twisty, atmospheric, and packed with moral dilemmas. It’s got that same blend of historical fiction and horror that makes 'Our Hideous Progeny' so addictive. Then there’s 'Mexican Gothic' by Silvia Moreno-Garcia, which swaps 19th-century Europe for 1950s Mexico but keeps the gothic dread and creepy family secrets cranked up to eleven.
For something more obscure but equally haunting, 'The Resurrectionist' by E.B. Hudspeth delves into grotesque anatomical experiments, complete with illustrations that’ll make your skin crawl. And if you’re into the feminist reimagining angle, 'The Mad Scientist’s Daughter' by Cassandra Rose Clarke (though more sci-fi) explores ethics and creation through a quieter, melancholic lens. Honestly, half the fun is chasing down these lesser-known gems—they’re like uncovering buried laboratory notes from a deranged genius.