Book Review: The Bleeding Woods by Brittany Amara
Summary and Themes
Brittany Amara’s debut horror novel, The Bleeding Woods, is a chilling exploration of trauma, power, and the monstrous within. Set in the eerie Appalachian wilderness (one of my fav settings!), the story follows Clara Lovecroft, a young woman grappling with latent supernatural abilities and the guilt of her parents’ deaths. The novel deftly blends psychological horror, gothic atmosphere, and sci-fi elements, creating a narrative that is as unsettling as it is lyrical. Themes of familial betrayal, obsession, and the duality of human nature are woven throughout, anchored by Clara’s fraught relationship with her sister Jade and the enigmatic, dangerous stranger Jasper.
Strengths and Critique
Amara’s prose is undeniably lush, evoking a haunting, dreamlike quality that amplifies the novel’s eerie setting. Passages like “the forest whispers, and within its haunting foliage, a strange man waits” immerse readers in Blackstone Forest’s oppressive dread. However, the flowery language occasionally disrupts pacing, with metaphors sometimes overshadowing clarity (e.g., “map-devoted application”). The first-person perspective excels in Clara and Jasper’s scenes, heightening their unsettling dynamic, but secondary characters like Jade and Grayson lack depth.
Structural choices, such as repetitive perspective shifts, risk diluting tension, though the novel’s second half delivers gripping horror payoffs. The twist involving Jasper’s true nature may polarize readers—while inventive, it feels abrupt against earlier characterizations. Despite this, the climax’s visceral imagery (“blood will spill in Blackstone Forest”) lingers, showcasing Amara’s talent for atmospheric horror.
How I would describe this book:
- A lyrical nightmare—gothic horror meets Appalachian folklore with a twist you won’t see coming.
- Perfect for fans of The Hazel Wood and Annihilation, with a monster romance that thrills and unnerves.
- Amara’s debut is as beautiful as it is terrifying, a forest drenched in blood and secrets.
Acknowledgments
Thank you to 47 North for providing an advance review copy. The Bleeding Woods is a bold addition to contemporary horror, and I look forward to Amara’s future works.
Final Recommendation
While uneven in pacing and prose, The Bleeding Woods is a standout for readers seeking genre-blending horror with poetic flair. Its strengths—unsettling atmosphere, complex protagonist, and daring twists—far outweigh its stumbles, marking Amara as a writer to watch. 4/5 stars.
Audience: Fans of psychological horror, gothic fiction, and dark fantasy. Best approached with patience for its deliberate, moody buildup.