
Member Reviews

Based on the introduction and prose segments at the beginning of this, I was sooo excited to love this collection. It has all of the elements: gothic inspiration, about motherhood in a dark way, focused around ritual and the natural world. Unfortunately, none of these poems stuck with me much. Some felt way too literal (telling not showing) whereas others felt like shuffled proetic segments with no central theme. I'm just going to blame myself for not having read We Have Always Lived in the Castle by Shirley Jackson and move along.
(thank you to NetGalley and Raw Dog Screaming Press for an e-arc in exchange for a review)

Thank you to the publisher NetGalley for my copy in exchange for an honest review!
I absolutely loved this collection of poetry. I admittedly do not read a lot of poetry, but I devoured all of these. I think a big part of that was that fact that the inspiration to Shirley Jackson's We Have Always Lived in the Castle was very apparent. You could feel the raw emotion radiating off the page and I only wish there were more!

This was delectably dark, twisted, and full of gory metaphors. The author forced us to dive in and experience this ruinous carnage. It was super quick but most definitely stuck out! I’d love to read more in this form.

" a safe darkness, the kiss of crowded warmth. Hunt me, I dare you."
this was a quick read of dark poetry.
I wasn't sure what to expect when I picked this up. but the poems in this are quite unique. I didn't mind it. I liked the story telling.
"The forest danced to the greed of sleep, the circle of trees a forgotten home"
I received a copy of the book from Netgally for an honest review

The last third of this was definitely my favourite part. The author mentions that a strong inspiration was we have always lived in the castle by Shirley Jackson and it really comes through in the first half of the collection, almost to the point where I was just re reading the novel in different words. That being said I enjoyed the imagery and overall aesthetic of the words

Its hard to give feedback on poetry, its so personal ands rough - but I did enjoy it. The kindle version looked a bit scuffed, so some of the pages seemed abit off - but thats not the authors mistake. All in all a good one.

This is a short but nice collection of poetry.
Every page seems to evoke a sense of dread and rage, as if the author is trapped. I guess that was the idea behind it all, to put into words how women are often trapped in life.
The vintage style illustrations throughout made it feel like an angry victorian maiden penned this.
I wouldn't say this is a pure horror genre though, because none of the poems deal with truly scary things, but it is definitely unsettling.

Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for an eACR in exchange for an honest review.
This is a beautiful and grotesque collection of poetry.
It's dark and feral, gothic and unhinged.
A short read, but some of those lines are going to stick with me. I really liked it.