Don’t miss these 30 modern Gothic novels that bring creaky floors, dripping walls, and hauntings to life in this week’s incredible new book list.
The Gothic never really died—it just moved into new houses. Modern Gothic fiction retains the eerie mood and emotional intensity of its classic roots. It’s just that the accommodations might look a little different.
In this modern take, we trade castles for cul-de-sacs and foggy moors for crumbling small towns, isolated artists’ retreats, and family homes with something dark lurking behind the walls. These stories utilize atmosphere and dread to expose contemporary fears, including class, gender, identity, and the monsters we create ourselves.
In modern Gothic novels, you’ll discover:
- Psychological hauntings over literal ghosts
- Domestic spaces that become prisons or mirrors
- Generational trauma and buried truths
- The tension between belonging and isolation
- Unreliable narrators and moral ambiguity
- Reimagined heroines who claim agency within the darkness
It would be impossible to encompass every book that dips into these themes, but I hope that these thirty novels will give you a wonderful start in acquainting yourself with the creeping dread that you’ll find peppered throughout these incredible stories.
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Want to trace these chills back to their literary ancestors? Step back in time with our 12 Classic Gothic Books That Started It All for a list of the essentials.
Modern Gothic Novels
From eerie estates to haunted hearts, these 30 modern Gothic tales revive the genre with fresh voices, psychological tension, and a touch of the uncanny.
Junie by Erin Crosby Eckstine
On a pre–Civil War Alabama plantation, sixteen-year-old Junie lives under the weight of loss, tending to a family that is not her own while mourning her sister's death. But Junie is restless, and the forested lands around the Bellereine estate hold secrets and spirits that refuse to stay buried.
When grief and desperation awaken her sister's ghost, Junie is pulled into a new story that illuminates the plantation's history and her sister's story. Eckstine's debut blends Southern Gothic atmosphere with historical reckoning in stunning prose.
NEW MODERN GOTHIC NOVELS
You Did Nothing Wrong by CG Drews
Elodie, her autistic son Jude, and her husband Bren move into a sprawling family farmhouse, hoping for calm and renewal amidst their renovation.
But when the walls begin to whisper and Jude hears voices saying the house is hurting from its updates, the dread becomes palatable.
As secrets unravel, you'll ask: Is the horror in the walls, in the family, or in her mind? This haunting, character-driven novel has surprised readers in the best ways.
Release Date- 17 March 2026
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The Possession of Alba Díaz by Isabel Cañas
In 1765, plague-ravaged Mexico, Alba Díaz seeks refuge at her fiancé's remote silver mine, only to find the isolation more terrifying than the outside world. Strange visions, sleepwalking, and a cold presence lurking beneath her skin signal that something (or someone) refuses to stay hidden.
When Elías, a troubled scholar from Spain, arrives, the two are drawn into a web of occult rituals, family secrets, and the Church's shadowy influence in this page-turner.
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The Artist of Blackberry Grange by Paulette Kennedy (Kindle Unlimited)
Called to Blackberry Grange in the Ozarks to care for her great-aunt, Sadie's desperate to uncover her great-aunt's life story before her dementia or death overcomes her.
As memories of her old lovers haunt Marguerite, she paints them as Sadie desperately tries to uncover her long-held secrets in this tale of ghostly family secrets.
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We Live Here Now by Sarah Pinborough (Kindle Unlimited)
Pinborough, known for her plot twist whiplash, delivers Gothic tension wrapped in cold stone and secret sins.
Emily and Freddie move from London to the majestic yet unsettling Larkin Lodge in Dartmoor after Emily’s near‑fatal accident. The house should mark a fresh start—but something within its walls feels decidedly wrong.
Old floorboards groan, fires extinguish without reason, and books tumble from shelves at the touch of unseen fingers. As Emily’s health and memories wobble, she’s left wondering if the haunting in her mind or in the house?
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The Hong Kong Widow by Kristen Loesch
Mei, a young refugee haunted by the past she fought so hard to escape, is drawn back into the house where everything went wrong—invited by the wife of the man who destroyed her life, asked to compete in a deadly spiritual ritual.
Decades later, the ghost of that night still whispers, and Mei must uncover the truth of what really happened... and whether the house was ever truly haunted or just full of secrets.
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All of Us Murderers by KJ Charles
Described as Crimson Peak meets Knives Out, Charles is back with a new LGBTQIA+ gothic romance.
Called to a wealthy relative's remote manor, the crumbling property isn't as scary as confronting the awful friends and family who linger there.
This property will be left to whoever marries the young ward, and while Zeb wants no part in this, it seems the house won't let him go (or the romaother romance brewing on the property).
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The Hounding by Xenobe Purvis
Orphans, superstition, and small-town paranoia abound in this horror debut.
Set in a village where the line between human and beast blurs, The Hounding follows five sisters under the suspicious gaze of neighbors and a volatile ferryman.
Purvis spins a story of fear, misogyny, and secrets that refuse to stay buried in this Gothic with teeth and claws.
Mayra by Nicky Gonzalez
Some friendships are impossible to leave behind, and some places are impossible to forget.
In the swamplands of Florida, Ingrid reconnects with her childhood friend Mayra, only to uncover unsettling truths that have grown with the moss and shadows. Gonzalez's lush prose transforms memory and desire into a Gothic landscape of longing and danger.
Thank you to my friend, Carrie, for this fabulous recommendation for our book list!
The Garden by Nick Newman
In an unnamed time and place, two elderly sisters, Evelyn and Lily, live in a secluded walled garden, tending to their home and following the almanac left by their mother.
The sisters' quiet life is shaken when they find a nameless boy hiding in a boarded-up house located in the center of their grounds.
As they investigate the mysteries of the boy's presence, they are forced to confront dark truths about themselves and the world around them.
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BACKLIST MODERN GOTHIC NOVELS
The Wife Upstairs by Rachel Hawkins (Kindle Unlimited)
In this modern Jane Eyre retelling set in a wealthy Alabama gated community, Jane sees a chance for a better life when she meets the enigmatic widower Eddie Rochester.
But the mansion she steps into is full of secrets, and the wife upstairs may not be as gone as everyone thinks.
Hawkins twists Southern charm with Gothic suspense, weaving a story of desire and deception inspired by the classic.
Diavola by Jennifer Thorne (Kindle Unlimited)
This sinister haunted-house page-turner became a massive book club hit for our spooky season festivities, described by the publisher as a "vacation Gothic."
Anna, the black sheep in her family, indulges in an Italian getaway with her annoying family. The trip quickly spirals into something much darker when strange noises echo through the night, the locals issue unsettling warnings, and the villa's shadowy past begins to creep into their vacation rental.
Filled with unlikeable characters, Anna's prickly behavior turns this story onto its head when she refuses to give in to what's been creeping into her life. Prepare to cackle!
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All the Sinners Bleed by S.A. Cosby (Kindle Unlimited)
Small towns hide big sins- a theme that resonates through much of Cosby's work. It's no secret that any of his novels could be on today's list, but All the Sinners Bleed felt the most fitting for today's assignment.
In Charon County, Virginia, Sheriff Titus Crown confronts murder, corruption, and generations of prejudice in a Southern Gothic thriller that's as atmospheric as it is unflinching. Cosby's novel digs into morality, legacy, and the shadows that cling to both land and people in this gripping story.
Interview with the Vampire by Anne Rice
In a candlelit room in New Orleans, a vampire tells his life story filled with centuries of love, death, and unbearable loneliness.
Rice reinvented the Gothic vampire as a creature of melancholy beauty and moral conflict. Her prose drips with equal parts sensuality and sorrow that put her writing on the map.
Weyward by Emilia Hart (Kindle Unlimited)
At the heart of this story, we uncover the empowering tale of three generations of women who must navigate male-dominated worlds and discover their inner strength.
In 2019, Kate escaped her abusive partner in London and found solace in Weyward Cottage, bequeathed by a distant relative. Surrounded by nature's embrace, Kate unravels the cottage's secrets — from the witch-hunting days of the 16th century to the discovery of her great aunt's hidden legacy.
Hart's unique eye for evocative gothic settings blends well with the natural world. The way women find their voice made this an empowering and impactful read, especially in audio with its full-cast narration.
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Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo
At Yale, secret societies don't just shape futures... they toy with the dead. Alex Stern, a dropout turned supernatural watchdog, uncovers occult conspiracies behind the ivy-covered walls.
Bardugo reimagines the Gothic tradition for a modern age, perfect for dark academia fans who love haunted institutions and morally gray heroines.
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Our Share of Night by Mariana Enriquez
Darkness runs in the blood in this sprawling Argentine Gothic about power, inheritance, and the haunting price of survival.
When a grieving father tries to protect his son from a family cult obsessed with immortality, the story travels across decades and borders, blending horror and history with a hypnotic sense of dread.
Enriquez writes with feverish intensity that feels like stepping deeper into a candlelit nightmare.
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The Cliffs by J. Courtney Sullivan
In this modern gothic, Jane's life has unraveled—her career as a respected archivist is gone, her marriage is crumbling, and she's grieving the recent loss of her estranged mother.
Tasked with selling her mother's hoarded belongings, Jane finds herself back in the Maine town she left behind, where the past haunts her at every turn.
When a wealthy homeowner seeks Jane's expertise to investigate strange occurrences in her newly renovated historic property, Jane embarks on a research project to uncover the home's unsettling history.
With ghostly apparitions, long-buried secrets, and ties to the Shaker and Indigenous communities, Jane's two-week assignment turns into a chilling mystery that could reshape her future.
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Fingersmith by Sarah Waters
Prepare for a plot twist rollercoaster in this gothic tale filled with queer longing, plenty of cons, betrayals, and reversals.
Sue Trinder has been raised by a nurturing "baby farmer" in a London slum alongside a family of cunning thieves. When a sophisticated con man named Gentleman proposes a scheme to win an heiress's fortune, he calls upon Sue for assistance.
The plan, however, takes an unexpected turn as Sue develops sympathy and care for her unsuspecting target. What unfolds yields shocking plot twists and turns that left me gasping out loud. I'm jealous of any reader who gets to read this for the first time.
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Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
A letter from her newly married cousin sends a glamorous socialite to a crumbling mansion in the Mexican countryside that's filled with secrets, creeping spores, and the suffocating grip of family legacy.
What begins as curiosity becomes a nightmare laced with colonial horror, feminism, and rot that spreads both literally and metaphorically throughout this incredible story.
Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward
On the Mississippi Gulf Coast, the past is never truly past.
Jojo, a thirteen-year-old boy, and his family navigate a world of poverty, drugs, and generational trauma, while ghosts (both literal and metaphorical) haunt their journey.
Ward's prose is lyrical and haunting, blending Southern Gothic with magical realism where the landscape itself feels alive, steeped in grief, memory, and the weight of history.
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Banyan Moon by Thao Thai
This emotional debut novel follows three generations of Vietnamese American women grappling with the death of their matriarch, Minh.
As Minh's granddaughter, Ann faces a crossroads in her seemingly perfect life. She returns home to Florida to help her estranged mother clean out the estate, but when they begin cleaning out the rundown manor, long-buried secrets in the Banyan House creep in.
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Flowers In The Attic by V.C. Andrews
My original introduction to Gothic literature came through these four siblings who were hidden away in the attic of their wealthy family's mansion. Was that the case for you?
The attic begins as a temporary refuge that later becomes a long confinement filled with betrayal, obsession, and the slow poisoning of their childhood innocence. Who can forget those powdered sugar treats, friends?
Flowers in the Attic is the twisted domestic Gothic that defined a generation (and this reader).
Rosemary's Baby by Ira Levin
Levin's classic thriller transforms a seemingly ordinary New York apartment building into a claustrophobic Gothic labyrinth, where nothing (and no one) is quite what it seems.
When Rosemary and Guy Woodhouse move into the Bramford, an old building in New York City with a dark reputation, the future seems bright. But as Rosemary’s pregnancy progresses, her neighbors grow suspiciously attentive, and her husband’s career suddenly soars.
What begins as a story of domestic bliss curdles into a psychological horror that still resonates.
Starling House by Alix E. Harrow
In the coal-scarred town of Eden, Kentucky, Opal is determined to escape poverty and secure a future for her brother. Her path leads her to the enigmatic Starling House, a mansion cloaked in mystery.
There, she meets Arthur Starling, the brooding heir whose family's dark past intertwines with the house's secrets. As she dives deeper into the home's mysteries, she uncovers tales of beasts, birds, and a haunting legacy that challenges her understanding of home and belonging.
The London Séance Society by Sarah Penner (Kindle Unlimited)
In the fog‑drenched salons of 1873 Paris and London, a celebrated medium and her reluctant apprentice dive into a labyrinth of death, deception, and the spirits that won't stay silent.
After her sister's mysterious death, Lenna joins the renowned Vaudeline D'Allaire to investigate an exclusive all‑male club devoted to the séance arts.
What begins as a quest for truth becomes a journey through illusion, power, and the unspeakable risks women take when they refuse to be invisible.
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Mary by Nat Cassidy
Mary is a middle-aged woman stuck in a dead-end job, plagued by mysterious health issues, and haunted by strange visions. When she returns to her hometown to care for her dying aunt, she discovers the town has a bloody history... and she may be at the center of it.
Nat Cassidy shares on GoodReads, "If you like things like serial killers, ghosts, the desert, unreliable narrators, and metaphysics I think you will enjoy it."
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YOUNG ADULT MODERN GOTHIC NOVELS
White Smoke by Tiffany D. Jackson (Kindle Unlimited)
I've never met a Tiffany Jackson book I didn't like —this is no exception.
In this gripping YA tale, Marigold is already on edge, navigating anxiety in the wake of a traumatic bedbug infestation.
Her family’s move to a seemingly perfect, rent-free home in a rundown neighborhood—provided through her mother’s new job at the Sterling Foundation—promises a fresh start. But the house holds dark secrets, and unsettling events soon blur the line between fear and reality.
Jackson blends the intricate story from the past haunts with the altogether real modern social horrors of systemic racism and gentrification.
House of Salt and Sorrows by Erin A. Craig (Sisters of the Salt)
On a misty island estate, twelve sisters are cursed by tragedy, with each one dying more mysteriously than the last. The surviving sisters dance through their grief in glittering midnight halls, unaware that something sinister is watching.
Craig's lush, seaside reimagining of The Twelve Dancing Princesses wraps grief and enchantment in Gothic dread, a surprise hit even with people who don't usually read fairytale retellings.
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Don't Let the Forest In by CG Drews
Atmospheric and emotionally intense, this young adult horror novel centers on queer love, twin bonds, and stories that refuse to stay on the page.
Andrew returns to Wickwood Academy, where his twin sister, Dove, has become distant. This situation leaves Andrew to rely on his best friend—and longtime crush—Thomas, whose macabre sketches begin to manifest as real, deadly monsters.
With Thomas hiding the truth about his parents' disappearance and haunted by his own creations, the boys must battle nightmarish creatures while confronting the darker sides of themselves.
As Andrew and Thomas's bond deepens into something more, the forest's horrors close in, threatening to destroy them both.