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Entertainment

13 Chilling Horror Books That Will Haunt You Long After You Finish

By Matthias Binder December 29, 2025
13 Chilling Horror Books That Will Haunt You Long After You Finish
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Between 2022 and 2023, sales of horror and ghost stories jumped by an incredible fifty-four percent in value, and in early 2024, sales continued to surge with another thirty-four percent increase. Let’s be real, these aren’t just numbers on a spreadsheet. They represent millions of readers willingly opening doors to worlds filled with demons, ghosts, and psychological terror. Why are we doing this to ourselves? Maybe it’s because horror holds up a dark funfair mirror to real world horrors during periods of unsettling upheaval like wars, pandemics, and climate change.

Contents
The Reformatory by Tananarive DueHorror Movie by Paul TremblayAmerican Rapture by C.J. LeedeIncidents Around the House by Josh MalermanThis Wretched Valley by Jenny KieferA Sunny Place for Shady People by Mariana EnriquezThe Eyes Are the Best Part by Monika KimThe Redemption of Morgan Bright by Chris PanatierI Was a Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham JonesYou Like It Darker by Stephen KingNever Flinch by Stephen KingSomething In the Walls by Daisy PearceThe Invisible Hotel by Yeji Y Ham

Here’s the thing. We’re living in a golden age of horror, both in quality and quantity, with never-ending lists of books added every month. The genre has evolved beyond the classic monsters and haunted mansions. Today’s horror explores marginalized voices, tackles social issues head-on, and blends genres in ways that would’ve made earlier generations dizzy.

The Reformatory by Tananarive Due

The Reformatory by Tananarive Due (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
The Reformatory by Tananarive Due (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

One of the most impactful releases evokes Stephen King’s storytelling while exploring the historical treatment of Black families in the American South during the first half of the twentieth century, following a young boy sentenced to a correctional institution. This isn’t your typical haunted house story. The horror here is layered. The ghosts wandering the halls are terrifying, sure, but the real nightmare is the systemic brutality inflicted on children by those meant to protect them. Due masterfully weaves paranormal elements with historical injustice in a way that makes you question which is more frightening. The book won a Stoker Award, which honestly feels like the bare minimum recognition for such powerful work.

Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay

Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
Horror Movie by Paul Tremblay (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

A cursed film from June 1993 made by guerrilla filmmakers released only three scenes to the public, yet grew a rabid fan base, and thirty years later Hollywood pushes for a big-budget reboot. The lone surviving cast member, who played the enigmatic Thin Kid, holds all the secrets about what really happened on that set. As memories flood back, the boundaries between film and reality begin to blur while he navigates crazed conventions and meddling producers. I love how Tremblay plays with the found footage and cursed media trope. The book doesn’t just tell you about horror, it actually includes portions of the screenplay itself, pulling you deeper into the nightmare.

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American Rapture by C.J. Leede

American Rapture by C.J. Leede (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
American Rapture by C.J. Leede (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

This hypersexualized plague novel follows sheltered Catholic schoolgirl Sophie on a Midwest odyssey, where lust becomes synonymous with death and her own burgeoning sexuality could signal infection. Honestly, the concept alone is enough to make you squirm. Despite scenes of grotesque violence and deeply uncomfortable sexual encounters, the author never allows the story to descend into titillation or exploitation, turning the pornographic gaze against itself. It’s a savage commentary on American morality and purity culture wrapped in an apocalyptic nightmare. Fair warning though, the ending might upset you more than anything else you’ll encounter this year.

Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman

Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
Incidents Around the House by Josh Malerman (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

From the author of Bird Box comes a chilling novel from the perspective of eight-year-old Bela, whose world includes Mommy, Daddo, Grandma Ruth, and Other Mommy, an evil entity who asks every day if she can go inside Bela’s heart. What makes this truly unsettling is how Malerman captures a child’s perspective. Bela tries to rationalize the inexplicable horrors happening around her because that’s what children do. Other Mommy grows restless, stronger, and bolder as horrifying incidents escalate, while Bela’s parents’ fragile marriage threatens to unravel the safety she relies on. The domestic horror elements here hit differently because they feel achingly real.

This Wretched Valley by Jenny Kiefer

This Wretched Valley by Jenny Kiefer (Image Credits: Unsplash)
This Wretched Valley by Jenny Kiefer (Image Credits: Unsplash)

Four ambitious climbers hike into the Kentucky wilderness in January 2024, and seven months later three mangled bodies are discovered in various states of decay with one body a stark skeleton, one emptied of guts, and the third missing tongue, eyes, ears, and fingers. Dylan remains missing despite disturbing Instagram live streams showing glimpses of her vanishing into dark woods. Kiefer’s debut takes inspiration from the infamous Dyatlov Pass incident, that real-life mystery that’s never been satisfactorily explained. The survival horror here taps into primal fears about nature and what might be lurking just beyond our campfires.

A Sunny Place for Shady People by Mariana Enriquez

A Sunny Place for Shady People by Mariana Enriquez (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
A Sunny Place for Shady People by Mariana Enriquez (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

This short story collection from the Argentine author is chilling, grotesque, and slyly funny, representing her return to what she does best and better than most. Stories like “The Refrigerator Cemetery” depict macabre games played among abandoned appliances, while “Black Eyes” repurposes Internet lore about two suspect children attempting to penetrate a narrator’s car. Enriquez has this incredible talent for taking the mundane and twisting it until you can’t look at ordinary objects the same way again. Her work blurs reality and supernatural horror so effectively that you’re never quite sure where one ends and the other begins.

The Eyes Are the Best Part by Monika Kim

The Eyes Are the Best Part by Monika Kim (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
The Eyes Are the Best Part by Monika Kim (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

This darkly funny psychological horror follows a college student who must protect her mother and sister from her mother’s creepy new boyfriend, who tries to reduce their humanness into stereotypes about doll-like, submissive Asian women. The title alone should give you chills about where this story is heading. Kim takes revenge horror and filters it through the lens of fetishization and microaggressions that Asian women face constantly. It’s brutal, visceral, and uncomfortably cathartic. Sometimes the real monsters aren’t supernatural at all.

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The Redemption of Morgan Bright by Chris Panatier

The Redemption of Morgan Bright by Chris Panatier (Image Credits: Pixabay)
The Redemption of Morgan Bright by Chris Panatier (Image Credits: Pixabay)

When Morgan infiltrates Hollyhock Asylum seeking answers about her sister’s mysterious death, she’s assaulted by punishing systems of control and the oppressive presence of another personality inside her own head. Is she mad? Has the system made her so? Spoiler alert, it’s something else entirely. This novel provides a chilling twist on the unreliable-narrator trope and a contemporary restaging of psychiatric cruelties, nodding to the past while echoing future-punk exploitation. The asylum setting feels both Gothic and disturbingly modern.

I Was a Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones

I Was a Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
I Was a Teenage Slasher by Stephen Graham Jones (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

From the author of The Only Good Indians comes one of 2024’s most anticipated horror novels that will scare the jibbers out of you, perfect for those who’ve been hitting rewind on favorite summertime slashers. Jones is a master at subverting expectations, and here he flips the slasher genre inside out by putting us inside the killer’s head during their teenage years. The body count is high, the violence is unflinching, but there’s also surprising depth about identity and belonging. It’s simultaneously a love letter to and deconstruction of slasher films.

You Like It Darker by Stephen King

You Like It Darker by Stephen King (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
You Like It Darker by Stephen King (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

King proves he’s the master of short fiction with this collection many are calling his finest yet, earning him his eleventh win across Horror, Mystery, Thriller, Fantasy, and Science Fiction categories. There’s a reason King remains horror royalty after all these decades. This collection explores existential dread and won the Goodreads Choice Awards. The stories range from quietly unsettling to outright terrifying, showcasing King’s range. Some will creep under your skin slowly, others will grab you by the throat from the first sentence.

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Never Flinch by Stephen King

Never Flinch by Stephen King (Image Credits: Wikimedia)
Never Flinch by Stephen King (Image Credits: Wikimedia)

In 2025, King’s latest release classified under Horror gave the category a new boost, performing twenty percent ahead of his 2024 collection, and he remains the biggest author of the category despite a slight volume decrease. What’s remarkable is how King continues to evolve. He’s not resting on his laurels or recycling old ideas. Each new collection proves why readers keep coming back. His understanding of human nature and what truly frightens us remains unmatched. The man simply doesn’t miss.

Something In the Walls by Daisy Pearce

Something In the Walls by Daisy Pearce (Image Credits: Unsplash)
Something In the Walls by Daisy Pearce (Image Credits: Unsplash)

This supernatural nineties-set creep-fest revolves around an English teenager claiming to be haunted by a witch, with shades of horror classics like The Conjuring and real-life hauntings, featuring prose written in such a way that certain sentences continue echoing around in your brain long after finishing. Released in February 2025, Pearce’s debut has already generated serious buzz. The nineties setting adds delicious nostalgia for those of us who remember that era, while the witch haunting taps into ancient fears. The atmosphere here is suffocating in the best possible way.

The Invisible Hotel by Yeji Y Ham

The Invisible Hotel by Yeji Y Ham (Image Credits: Flickr)
The Invisible Hotel by Yeji Y Ham (Image Credits: Flickr)

This standout horror book taps into contemporary struggles through supernatural elements. There’s something deeply unnerving about hotels, those liminal spaces where we’re neither home nor truly away. Ham exploits that unease brilliantly, layering in themes about identity and belonging. Horror’s ability to mirror real-world issues like political unrest and social inequality drives demand, with books tapping into contemporary struggles resonating with modern readers. This novel works on multiple levels, functioning as both straightforward ghost story and social commentary.

Horror literature has transformed into something remarkable and essential. These thirteen books represent different corners of the genre, from psychological terror to supernatural nightmares, from historical horrors to apocalyptic futures. They’re united by one thing though: the ability to lodge themselves deep in your psyche where they’ll resurface at three in the morning when you’re lying awake wondering what that sound was.

The beauty of horror is that it lets us confront our fears in controlled environments. We can close the book, turn on the lights, remind ourselves it’s fiction. Yet the best horror refuses to stay contained. It seeps out, coloring how we see the world. These books will do exactly that. They’ll make you look twice at shadows, question what’s lurking in basements, wonder about the people around you.

What do you think? Have you dared to read any of these nightmarish tales yet?

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