
Member Reviews

Is it the baby blues or are you being stalked by a creature called the Night Hag which has plagued you since childhood? Is this a commentry on post partum depression and the difficulties new mothers face or a spooky supernatural tale of possession? Surprise it's both! With echoes of Mary by Nat Cassidy and Rosemary's Baby what starts out as a pretty creepy domestic themed horror quirky spirals into a nightmarish supernatural possession- esque? story, this was equal parts disturbing and witty, I was in a constant pendulum swing of feeling unease one moment and laughing the next, Walter's has an uncanny ability to write biting commentry on issues pertaining to post partum depression and motherhood, there really is a need to cry over spilt milk in Flora's case as she navigates being a new mother and all the complications that come with it, nursing being one of them, I love ambiguity in horror but I didn't realise the narrator was *possibly* unreliable (or is she?) untill past half way, I was SHOOK, this kept me on my toes and I thought the author done a fantastic job of meshing reality with the supernatural
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TW: postpartum depression/psychosis
This is a book about the horrors of early motherhood. Your life is no longer your own. You’re leaking all kinds of fluids. You’re not sleeping. You might be possessed…well, this character might be. (But if you experience the kinds of things that this character does after giving birth, please go to your OB and talk about it. Flora is having a singular experience- modern medicine can help us real people.)
As the story begins, Flora is a new mom settling in for a few weeks alone with her new baby between her dad and stepmom helping out and her husband coming home from being deployed. Things quickly start taking a turn. It’s so interesting how much mothers will be able to relate to this woman’s experience within a horror story. In my opinion, the portrayal of Flora’s feelings of isolation is one of the great successes of this book. So much so, that you could remove the horror/fantasy elements and still have a powerful and thoughtful account of a mother’s experience with postpartum depression or psychosis.
Thanks for the ARC, Mulholland Books! I raced through it in an afternoon.

I thought this was an interesting read. I did not expect where it was going. I was not absolutely in love with it, but it was interesting.