Sunday, July 5, 2026

Six titles that make us question those closest to us

Lucy Ashe trained at The Royal Ballet School for eight years, first as a Junior Associate and then at White Lodge. She has a Diploma in Dance Teaching with the British Ballet Organisation. Her first two novels, The Dance of the Dolls and The Sleeping Beauties, were inspired by her years immersed in the world of classical dance.

Ashe's new novel is The Model Patient.

At CrimeReads the author tagged "six novels that reveal how terrifying it is to have one’s sense of reality systematically dismantled by the person we are supposed to love and trust." One title on the list:
Mexican Gothic by Silvia Moreno-Garcia

In this gothic horror novel, Noemí Taboada travels to her newlywed cousin Catalina’s home in the mountains to help investigate her claims that her husband wants to poison her. When Noemí enters High Place, her intelligence and logic are weaponized against her and the Doyle family use medical claims about inherited mental stability and supernatural elements to make her question everything. The novel is part of a long tradition of gothic novels —Jane Eyre, The Mysteries of Udolpho, Rebecca—where a woman’s ability to trust her instincts begins to unravel. The isolation of the setting makes her particularly vulnerable in this beautifully written and deeply unsettling novel.
Read about the other entries on Ashe's list at CrimeReads.

Mexican Gothic is among C.J. Dotson's five novels featuring decaying settings and Samsun Knight's seven horror novels about mysticism.

--Marshal Zeringue