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Thursday, December 4, 2025

Why I'm Reading: Persona and Itch! via Booklist

The December 2025 issue of Booklist features two reviews by me. Both are excellent choices for all library audiences. 

As usual, here on the blog I am presenting my draft review with lots of bonus info. 

First up an impressive debut,

Book cover for Persona by Aoife Josie Clements. Click on the image for more information
Persona
by Aoife Josie Clements
Jan. 2026. 280p. LittlePuss, paper, $15.95  (9781964322063); e-book (9781964322070)First published December 1, 2025 (Booklist).

Annie, early twenties, is a trans girl who has become a shut-in, struggling to get by over the last year with a meager online job, as the garbage (and bugs drawn to it) builds up in her apartment. Her depression is getting worse by the day, making her question if she should even keep living. That is, until she happens upon a video, on a porn site, of a trans girl that looks and sounds exactly like her. Amy is that other girl and Clements introduces her story to readers in part two before bringing the doppelgängers together for a nightmarishly realistic and immersively terrifying journey, forcing the reader to take a long hard look at late stage capitalism, internet obsession, even what it means to be human. A disorienting story that will hold readers in its thrall much like the sf-horror tinged novels of Blake Crouch and Caitlin Starling, but also suggest to fans bleak but honestly thought provoking stories like Coup de Grȃce by Ajram and Tell Me I’m Worthless by Rumfitt.


Three Words That Describe This Book: disorienting, doppelgänger, nightmarish

Further Appeal: More words-- thought provoking, hard truths, immersive terror, SF horror.


An impressive Debut-- I am excited to see what else this author can do. The storylines of first Annie and then Amy-- telling the same story in part 1 and 2 but from Annie and then Amy's perspective was an awesome narrative choice. And then part 3, they come together-- it is so disorienting both because their names are similar and they look the same and they are in conversation back and forth..... what a great example of the writing itself adding to the readers disorientation. It ratchets up the unease and makes the entire story better.


And then they go on a road trip together and it all goes from disorienting to nightmarish and quite honestly existentially terrifying. This is when the book goes from a good horror story about 2 trans women who find out they look exactly the same and have mirror image apartments to a universally terrifying story.

It stays realistic even as it gets more nightmarish and delves into a bit of SF horror. So many stairs. I don't want to go into a stairwell anytime soon. Seriously. 

The entire metaphor of the doppelgänger as what it feels like to live as a transperson is not new-- the life before and after- but what Clements does with it is unique and new. Also, being trans in and of itself has nothing to do with the horror. It is just who these two women are. The horror is much much much bigger than them and their lives. I loved that as well. 

The book is a horror story that critics late stage capitalism, especially how hard it hits young workers, the horror of lives ruled by the internet, and how easy and horrific  it is for women on the fringes of society to turn to sex work for money. Loneliness, depression, suicide are all here. Garbage piling up and lots of bugs as well. But the garbage and bugs are there to set the stage. They are not the horror.

This book is a solid 4.5. Like a lot of excellent debuts, it needed a bit more at the end. I loved that the ending was not tidy and that all the problems were not solved. But it needed just a bit stronger of a statement about the SF esque horror parts. Something to bring the terror out of the book. The last pages try to do that but I think it could have been more effective and stronger (I am trying very hard to not give anything away). If that final page was a little more direct and less detached (to mirror the directness and immersive present of the rest of the book) it would have been 5 stars for sure.

Overall-- a strong debut that will linger with readers long after turning the final page, every time they log into an internet chat room or even (as I said before) started walking down a long stairwell. *shivers*

Readalikes: There are many ways this book could lead readers to another title. For Blake Crouch mentioned above, I would suggest Recursion or Dark Matter and for Caitlin Starling 100% Last to Leave the Room but also The Luminous Dead.

All of what I have said here should make it clear to you that this book about two trans girl is for a huge swath of your SF-Horror readers, no matter their own identities. Do not pigeon-hole this book or you and your readers will miss out on a exciting new voice.

Book cover for ITCH! by Gemma Amor. Click on the image for more information.
ITCH!
By Gemma Amor
Jan. 2026. 352p. Mobius, $28  (9781399745369)

Josie has returned home to the village of Ellwood, known for its centuries old “Devil’s March” festival, to recover from the head injury sustained at the hands of her London girlfriend. After the most recent march, Josie finds the decomposed, bug-riddled, body of a young woman on the festival path. The discovery rocks Josie’s tenuous recovery, but it also gives her the strength to begin addressing the trauma of her own repressed memories, memories which are key to getting justice for the dead woman. Told over the course of one year, this visceral, and original story deftly blends investigative, psychological, and folk horror elements, realistically and compassionately addressing the complicated horror of trauma, ultimately giving agency to its victims. And then there are the ants; so many ants. Have they really infested Josie? Does it matter? The answer may lie in how much scratching the reader does throughout? For fans of titles like The Haunting of Velkwood by Kiste, The Daughters of Block Island by Carmen, or Mothered by Stage.

Note: This book came out in 2025 in England but will be released by an American publisher in January 2026. 

There Words That Describe This Book:  folk horror, trauma, investigative elements


Further Appeal: Please note that "bugs" are not in the three words. They are important but honestly, the horror here goes way deeper than the bugs. They make a great hook to draw you in though.


Other words: bugs, strong sense of place, search for justice for dead girls, immersive.


More from my notes: Solid folk horror with a strong female main character-- a woman who has lived trough trauma and is finally uncovering past memories. She is working to overcome her trauma and heal and find the justice she can. The timeline and the up and downs of this process were honest here. Josie does not wave a magic wand to have a life of trauma fixed.

There is a good investigative element as well. The folk horror festival from the town-- Ellwood-- is creepy and the story is framed around one year from the day after until it happens the next year. 

The way Amor is able to intersect the dead girls with the festival was original and horrific. It made everything more terrifying. And it was seamless. There is a twist in the investigation as to how the girls were killed that was chilling and unique. 

Oh and bug. Lots of bugs, especially ants. They are incorporated into the story but also are part of Josie-- they are the manifestation of her anxiety and trauma, but they are also the source of her strength and fearlessness. Are all of them real? Does it matter? It does not. it was a well employed and visceral narrative device that works from start to finish. Also try not to itch while reading this.

But this book is so much more than the bugs and I liked that. As a horror novel it did a great job weaving the folk horror and psychological horror subgenres but also the investigative elements were weaved in well. Speaking of, those investigative/mystery elements resolve realistically. They figure out who is responsible, but not every questions can be answered, not every dead girl found, and I liked that. 

Readalikes: I fit in a bunch above, but also A Mask of Flies by Lyons and The Queen by Cutter for the bug horror fans. And anything by Simone St. James.

Wednesday, December 3, 2025

Attack of the Best Lists 2025: Audiobooks Edition

This post is part of my year end "Attack of the Best Lists" coverage. To see every post in my "Attack of the Best Lists 2025" coverage [and more backlist best of the year options] you can click here. 

Today I have Audio specific 2025 best lists from Audible and AudioFile Magazine.

Both are separated into useful categories/genres and include extra appeal information in their reviews, most importantly, comments about the narrators. The Audible list includes Podcasts as well.

The appeal info is useful all year long, especially via AudioFile Magazine because they have reviews all year long, with monthly "earphone" winners-- think of that as equivalent to a star for a print book. And the reviews are written to help you match the audio with its best reader. I use AudioFile to help readers (including myself) all the time. It helps me help readers to figure out if they would prefer a specific title on audio versus print. I have had great success using it and honestly, have yet to find a better resource for Audio RA.

A few more notes about RA for Audio readers. For some readers, the format doesn't matter, they want the book they want as fast as possible. But for others, myself included, I prefer audio in specific genres (for me it is nonfiction and mystery). Still others use audio for commuting, exercising, chores, etc.... How and when people listen can matter for audio. These are considerations that need to come up in the RA conversation for audio readers.

A few more  things about these lists from you RA Service standpoint:

  • You can use these lists to make displays online with links to eAudio-- use QR codes online AND in the stacks to provide easier access directly to your services where patrons can access them. Make lists on Libby to make it even easier for people to find the titles.
  • You can use these lists to help fill out your in library displays even if you put the print book on display. No one is double checking if you got the format correct and there is no library jail to send you to if they figure it out. With best lists, the more titles, the better. So you have the print in your department and not the audio, or the audio is e only. Who cares. Put that print version on the shelf.
  • Some of the Audible best titles may not be available anywhere but Audible, but a quick glance  reveals that the big ones are going to be available on your library's eAudio streaming sites.
  • Neither is great with obvious backlist access, so I have it here for you. The best audio books from the past few years will be on the shelf and are still a great listen. Remember, if a book is a few years old but the patron has not read it yet, it is still "new" to them:
    • Audible Best of 20242023202220212020 (I love how Audible's presentation of these lists has changed so much over the 5 years listed. That alone illustrates how much the popularity of eAudio has exploded in the last few years)
    • Audiofile's Best of 20242023202220212020
  • Back to the first bullet point: if you make a list in Libby for this year's best audio, please go back and use the links I have provided to also make lists for the past few year's best audio. And link to this lists in other lists. See last week's Best of the Best post from Chicago Public Library for a great example of how to make sure past best lists are accounted for with a single click.

Tuesday, December 2, 2025

Library Journal SF & Fantasy Preview and Genre Previews (in general) As a Overlooked Year in Review Resource

A lot of attention is spent on looking back this time of year. Of course I have been a great example of that. But I would also argue that the end of the year is also when we can begin using what we have seen to think about what is coming next.

That is the thesis of my upcoming, annual Year in Review program, as well.(it will be via PCI Webinars on 2/11/26; more info soon).

Today, I have another example-- the recently released SF/Fantasy Preview from Library Journal, but first let me back up a bit.

My long-time friend Kristi Chadwick is the director at Ballston Community Public Library in Burnt Hills, NY. She is also the SFF columnist for LJ. Back in 2018, Kristi helped me run Librarians' Day for StokerCon in Providence, RI. During that time, Kristi was the LJ SF/Fantasy/Horror columnist, but even back then, she was noticing that horror was gaining too much steam for her to be able to cover it properly. And so began the discussion of her dropping the Horror from the SF/Fantasy review column so that LJ could add a 4x a year stand alone Horror review column penned by me. That Horror review column appeared for the first time in January of 2020, with a column that included a review of The Only Good Indians by Stephen Graham Jones.

The rest, as they say, is history. I will have more to say about this in the next few weeks, but again back to today....In the October issue of LJ, Kristi did her genre preview for SF and Fantasy. All of the genre previews, inlacing my Horror one in the July issue, follow a similar outline. The authors, normally that genre's columnist, look at their genre and the books coming in the next 6 ish month from the publication of the preview article. We are then tasked with letting people know what trends appear to be on the horizon.

Also, every preview article has a full spreadsheet of all of the titles mentioned plus many more that we author's want you to know about. And everything is listed to make it easy for you to add them to your on-order carts.

These are not books we have read cover to cover and reviewed before these articles are written, but we all use our expertise covering these genres to alert you as to the books you should be placing on order AND we are helping you to prepare for trends before they happen.

While library workers encounter these genre preview articles throughout the year, it is worth revisiting them at the end of a year to get up to speed in that genre, its trends, its most popular authors, and how your collection reflects these conclusions. Do you need to order more of a certain subgenres of books? Do you need to be preparing for readalikes with backlist titles? What are your readers most popular titles and/or subgenres in these genres?

All of these are questions worth asking, by every library workers who helps readers, at the end of the year. And even though these previews are spread out all the year through, accessing them again at the end of the year, helps to give you a fuller picture of both that genre AND all of popular fiction.

Below I have the introduction to Kristi's SF/Fantasy Genre Preview but since LJ doe not make it easy to pull these all up in one place, I also have a linked list below to make it easier for all of you to peruse them all in one place.

I hope you utilize these genre preview articles as you go through your end of the year processes.

Image of books from the Library Journal SF/Fantasy Preview. Click image for details

Violence, Vengeance, and a Cup of Tea | 2025 SF & Fantasy Preview
by Kristi Chadwick

The forthcoming season of SFF titles navigates a landscape of books that lean toward danger, intrigue, and doom. While last year saw the convergence of SFF and a range of other genres, this year dark fantasy is the leading trend, followed by dark academia. Dystopian books have also returned to prominence. Providing books for all moods and readers, cozy titles still hold sway as well. Romantasy remains a leading category (see LJ’s romance preview in the October issue for detailed coverage), and series titles continue to dominate genre fiction, offering readers duologies, trilogies, and much longer runs.

Click here to read

Monday, December 1, 2025

Attack of the Best Lists 2025: Booklist's Editors Choices

Welcome back after the American long weekend of food. family, and at least here in Chicago-- 10 inches of snow. 

It is going to be a slow start to the week for everyone for sure, and full disclosure I am off Thursday-Friday to train a library in person (but you will still have content and a horror giveaway, don't worry).

One of my favorite Year in Review events is the December issue of Booklist Magazine. Booklist should alway be your go-to publication for trusted collection development and RA. They don't have news articles. Everything is reviews, lists, and interviews with authors-- every single month. And as I have reminded you many times here on the blog, each issue is a spotlight on at least 2 reading areas, meaning every issue has "best lists" from the previous 12 months. 

The December issue takes it up a notch by making the spotlight every starred review from 2025 and the Editor's Choice for the best of the best. Below I have the table of contents with links to the lists for all ages. Pass this post on to your youth colleagues as well. 

(Plus, they still have reviews of upcoming books. I have 2 horror reviews of 2026 titles in this issue, and will post them on Thursday.)

On the Cover Art by Jeremy Collins, from The Wild Dark: Finding the Night Sky in the Age of Light, by Craig Childs, which received a starred review in the April 2025 issue of Booklist and which appears here on Booklist Editors’ Choice. Used with permission of Torrey House Press.
On the Cover
Art by Jeremy Collins, from The Wild Dark: Finding the Night Sky in the Age of Light, by Craig Childs, which received a starred review in the April 2025 issue of Booklist and which appears here on Booklist Editors’ Choice. Used with permission of Torrey House Press.