What makes 'The Walls Around Us' so fascinating is how it weaponizes the supernatural as a narrative equalizer. These aren't random poltergeists—the ghostly elements serve as the only possible justice system for girls society has already decided are 'guilty.' The prison itself becomes this liminal space where the rules of reality bend to expose deeper truths. I love how Suma lets us sit with ambiguity too; is Amber truly haunted, or is this her fractured psyche coping with trauma? The supernatural doesn't feel tacked on—it's the core language of a story about marginalized voices demanding to be heard, even from beyond the grave.
That book messed with my head in the best way possible! 'The Walls Around Us' isn't just a ghost story—it's this layered exploration of guilt, justice, and the things we carry. The supernatural elements creep in so subtly at first, almost making you question if they're just metaphors for the girls' psychological states. Nova Ren Suma writes these haunting scenes where the line between reality and something 'other' blurs, like when the prison walls literally start whispering secrets. It's not about jump scares; it's about how the past refuses to stay buried, literally and figuratively. The ghosts become this visceral representation of the characters' unspoken truths—Violet's buried violence, Amber's suppressed memories. What gutted me was how the supernatural finale forces everyone to confront what they've denied. The floating hairbrushes and eerie cell block echoes? They're the only way these incarcerated girls could ever have their voices heard.
I remember finishing it and staring at my bedroom wall for ten minutes, wondering if my own regrets might manifest that way. Suma uses the supernatural to ask this brutal question: What happens to the stories nobody believes? The answer comes in spine-chilling flashes—the dead don't stay quiet when justice fails the living. That last scene with the ballet shoes? Chills. Absolute chills.
2026-03-10 18:56:11
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The Darkness Between Us
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Briella Hart has spent her entire life fading into the background. The quiet girl with an alcoholic mother and an absentee father who ditched them years ago without a backwards glance. Gossip and mockery follow her wherever she goes. She learns early on that dreams do not come true for people like her. Especially not the dream that she has secretly carried for years.
Ryder Landon is untouchable, powerful, and everything that she can never have. The Alpha heir to the Crescent Moon pack, everyone either wants to be him or be with him. He is known. But beneath the hardened exterior, he’s a guy who feels everything too deeply. The weight of leadership, fear of failure, and constantly needing to balance what his pack needs with what his heart wants.
Then one devastating night at the Full Moon Festival changes everything.
Humiliated and heartbroken, Briella disappears without a trace, leaving behind only a note echoing Ryder’s cruelest words—and a secret that could destroy them both.
For five long years, Ryder searched for Briella, but the trail always turned cold. When their paths cross again, she is different. No longer the timid girl who moved about unnoticed. Quickly, Ryder realizes three things. One, his heart still belongs to her despite the distance. Two, there is a little boy named Liam who has her hair and his eyes. Three, someone wants her dead.
Now, with enemies closing in and someone determined to see Briella dead, Ryder realizes he is running out of time. Because losing her once nearly destroyed him.
He will not survive losing his family twice.
Mason Reid has everything hockey captain, scholarship, a dad who’s also the coach. The only thing he can’t have is Ezra Cole. When a cafeteria fight gets them benched, the principal forces them to train together in secret. What starts as hate turns into desperate stolen nights, lingering touches, and a kiss that cracks Mason’s whole world open.
As senior year drags them through competitions, rumors, and a chaotic training camp, Mason and Ezra aren’t the only ones circling each other. A new transfer student wants them both. A popular girl falls hard for Ezra. And one jealous classmate catches something he was never meant to see… and starts blackmailing all four of them with a video that could destroy everything.
Family rejection, panic attacks, public humiliation, and the fear of losing scholarships force Mason and Ezra to decide: keep hiding and lose each other forever… or burn it all down and skate out together.
What is scarier than someone living in your walls? How about finding out the boy in the walls has seen a monster in there?
What will the Count's daughter and her two unusual friends do to protect her home?
Rated 12+ for light violence, kissing, sexual reference
In a city where ambition shines brighter than honesty, Ethan Blackwood has built his life on control. A rising executive with a flawless image, Ethan keeps his emotions tightly guarded, believing that vulnerability is a weakness he cannot afford. Love, if it exists at all, is something distant—something meant for other people.
Kai Rivera lives by an entirely different rulebook. A bold, intuitive photographer, Kai sees the world through shadows and light, capturing truths others work hard to conceal. Unafraid of emotion or connection, he moves through life with fearless curiosity—until a chance encounter at a rain-soaked art gallery collides him with Ethan.
What begins as a charged glance turns into an undeniable pull.
As Kai’s uninvited lens follows Ethan into quiet cafés, crowded elevators, and hidden rooftops, tension grows into something neither of them can escape. Ethan’s carefully built walls begin to crack under Kai’s relentless honesty, while Kai finds himself drawn deeper into a man who refuses to admit how much he wants to be seen.
But desire is never simple.
Jealousy, misunderstandings, and the pressure of expectations threaten to tear them apart. Forced into moments of uncomfortable proximity, both men are pushed to confront the truths they’ve been avoiding—about fear, identity, and the cost of loving openly. When emotions finally collide, Ethan must decide whether protecting his image is worth losing the one person who sees him completely.
Shadows Between Us is a slow-burn BL romance about longing, restraint, and the courage it takes to step out of the shadows. It is a story of two men learning that love does not demand perfection—only honesty.
This story follows Clara Carroll, a hardworking woman raised in poverty by her single mother in Maryland, and Shomer, the guardian angel quietly assigned to watch over her.
From her last days at the University of Maryland to her first steps into the corporate world, Clara’s life is shaped by help she never sees. Shomer protects her from failure, illness, and emotional breakdown, drawing strength from her happiness. But when jealousy and betrayal cost Clara her job, the pain hits her hard and leaves Shomer too weak to keep going.
With his powers fading and Clara’s life at risk, Shomer breaks the rules. He comes down to Earth as a man named Alex Thompson so he can stay close to her. As Alex helps Clara rebuild her life, they grow closer, and what starts as care turns into love. But their relationship is forbidden by the angelic council known as the Pathwardens.
When heaven finds out what Alex has done, he is called back to face judgment. What follows is a conflict that could affect both heaven and Earth. Alex must choose between his duty and the woman he loves, while Clara is forced to face the truth about him and find strength she didn’t know she had.
When 19-year-old Clara, a village girl, is mysteriously transported 50 years into the future, she lands in the home of a wealthy childless couple. Taken in and enrolled in a prestigious school, Clara must hide a dangerous secret: she possesses supernatural powers that could alter the future. But her past isn’t finished with her enemies from another time are determined to capture her, and only her new friends, tech genius Mike, fighter-in-training James, and clever strategist Bridget, can help her survive.
Romance, danger, and secrets collide as Clara navigates two worlds. Can she protect the future without losing herself?
The supernatural elements in 'The Winter Ghosts' aren't just there for spooky thrills—they serve as a bridge between grief and healing. The protagonist, Freddie, is drowning in loss after his brother's death in WWI, and the ghostly encounters in the Pyrenees become metaphors for his unresolved pain. The spectral village of Nulle, frozen in time, mirrors how trauma can trap us in the past. It's less about jump scares and more about how haunting memories can be.
What I love is how the ghosts aren't traditional villains; they're echoes of collective sorrow. The novel leans into regional folklore, like the French legend of the 'Ombres,' lost souls seeking closure. That blend of personal tragedy and cultural myth makes the supernatural feel achingly real. By the end, you wonder if Freddie imagined it all—but that ambiguity is the point. Sometimes, the things that haunt us are the ones we need most to move forward.