Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Odessa

Rate this book
In a powerfully imagined Russia at the height of the pogroms, a grief-stricken family turn to ancient magic to bring their daughter back from the grave.

Yetta is a bright, quick teenage girl with a wild, searching spirit. Stifled by her mother's anxiety, her father’s rules, and the path that’s been laid out for her, she craves the kind of freedom she doesn’t know the edges of. But her family has reason to be cautious and restrictive. Fear has wrapped itself around their shtetl. Jews are mysteriously disappearing, and there are whispers of an impending Gentile attack. When violence comes to their door, Yetta is killed.

Her father, in his grief, fumbles through his nascent knowledge of ancient texts and old magic to bring her back. By some miracle, Yetta is returned—but although she looks the same, Yetta is not the girl she once was. She knows there is a secret her family is keeping from her. The answer resides, in part, in the monstruous being stalking the villagers and their enemies, lurking in the woods beyond the shtetl, something that may be of her father’s making, and a being which has plans of its own.

8 pages, Audiobook

First published April 21, 2026

125 people are currently reading
19801 people want to read

About the author

Gabrielle Sher

1 book42 followers

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
172 (29%)
4 stars
264 (45%)
3 stars
120 (20%)
2 stars
22 (3%)
1 star
3 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 330 reviews
Profile Image for Dustin.
57 reviews8 followers
November 2, 2025
I'm honestly kind of speechless after finishing this. Odessa is a harrowing and intense read, as you can imagine from the premise. Even right from the first few pages, it felt like the book locked me in its grasp and never let go. It's deeply sad, but there's strength, hope, endurance, and love bubbling beneath the surface. Plus, it features one of my absolute favorite folkloric beings and has an absolutely stunning cover. Seriously, I'd love a poster version of the cover to put on my wall.

Highly, highly recommend!

Thank you to NetGalley and Little, Brown and Company for the review copy!
Profile Image for Karli.
201 reviews3 followers
April 24, 2026
My great grandma (who was practically the only grandparent I had growing up) was born in Odessa in 1910 so I was initially drawn to this book because of this setting. Then I saw there was a Golem and my intrigued peaked more. All I really knew about them was from the book 'The Golem and the Jinni' which is one of my go to comfort books. So I was thrilled to have a horror book with them.

This book was truly phenomenal for a debut. What a fresh idea. The atmosphere was incredible, the author really did a great job building up the desperation felt not only by Mordechai but also Freida and while they are both desperate to protect their families they have different views on what that means. Yetta was also a great character and I loved watching her transformations throughout the book. All the rage was felt (both myself and Yetta). It was beautiful, harrowing, and tragic.

You've probably seen this blow up in the book community and there is a good reason why. Ill definitely be reading the author again.

Thank you to Little, Brown and Company and Netgalley for the free arc in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for Jensen McCorkel.
572 reviews8 followers
October 25, 2025
The novel is set in a version of Tsarist Russia in the early 20th century amid an organized massacre of the Jews. Yetta is violently killed but her father uses his knowledge of ancient Jewish texts and old magic to bring her back to life. But these things never goes as planned. Instead of his daughter returning he gets a golem, a mythological creature from Jewish folklore.

This story deals with some heavy themes such as antisemitism, persecution, violence and grief so it will evoke strong emotions in the reader. The author gives the reader a vivid historical setting with a looming threat of violence and an atmosphere of overall dread. This reads like a historical fiction with elements of magical realism that aides in the horror or gothic tone and feel.

Because the supernatural and horror elements are layered into a deep historical Jewish experience and folklore some who are not familiar with Jewish folklore or customs may need to look some things up. Concepts related to Jewish holidays, life-cycle events, weekly observances as well the mystical aspects of Judaism are regularly referenced. As a Jew myself, I enjoyed the folklore aspects of the story immensely.

Overall Odessa is a darkly poetic, historically magical debut that blends Jewish folklore, grief, and gothic horror. A story that transforms from historical horror to a psychological haunting that evokes emotion.
Profile Image for Ghoul Von Horror.
1,131 reviews516 followers
May 5, 2026
TW/CW: Language, violence, blood, Antisemitism, death of pregnant woman, sexual assault, death of child

*****SPOILERS*****
About the book:
Yetta is a bright, quick teenage girl with a wild, searching spirit. Stifled by her mother's anxiety, her father’s rules, and the path that’s been laid out for her, she craves the kind of freedom she doesn’t know the edges of. But her family has reason to be cautious and restrictive. Fear has wrapped itself around their shtetl. Jews are mysteriously disappearing, and there are whispers of an impending Gentile attack. When violence comes to their door, Yetta is killed.Her father, in his grief, fumbles through his nascent knowledge of ancient texts and old magic to bring her back. By some miracle, Yetta is returned—but although she looks the same, Yetta is not the girl she once was. She knows there is a secret her family is keeping from her. The answer resides, in part, in the monstruous being stalking the villagers and their enemies, lurking in the woods beyond the shtetl, something that may be of her father’s making, and a being which has plans of its own.
Release Date: April 21st, 2026
Genre: Horror
Pages: 288
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐

What I Liked:
1. Love the writing style
2. Yetta is a well rounded character

What I Didn't Like:
1. The rush into bringing her back (I don't know jewish beliefs so maybe it has to happen soon but it's not explained that I read)
2. Pretty slow and boring

Overall Thoughts:
{{Disclaimer: I write my review as I read}}

I can't believe they murdered Yetta like that. She really thought he was going to give her grace because they flirted and he just assaulted her and strangled her. Disgusting.

I guess I'm wishing there was a second they took for us to understand that effect of Yetta being murdered before jumping into her being brought back. It just feels so fast. I know it's a short book but I need to feel the gravity of her loss. It's giving animal put down and at the animal shelter by 4pm to get new pet vibes.

Final Thoughts:
I dnfed this 100 pages into the story. I didn't know it was about a golem but I honestly found myself bored with the story. Everything is sooooo slow and moves at a snails pace. It's more about emotions and the losses one suffers vs an actual horror novel. I wish it had more creepy factors and maybe more came later but I didn't really care to find out.

IG | Blog

Thanks to Netgalley and Hachette Audio for this advanced copy of the book. All thoughts and opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Lorin (paperbackbish).
1,131 reviews89 followers
April 21, 2026
Thank you Little, Brown and Co. for my free ARC of Odessa by Gabrielle Sher — available Apr 21! This was one of my most anticipated reads for the year, and it fully surpassed my expectations.

» READ IF YOU «
🪆 can't resist folklore horror
👊 want to hate men (extra) for a bit
🩸 have ever wanted to rip someone's throat out

» SYNOPSIS «
In early 20th-century Russia, a family will do anything to hold on to the daughter they've lost to violence. But back from the dead, Yetta is no longer the same girl she was. Is it the magic that's changed her, or is it the pain she's endured at the hands of the men who are now relying on her help?

» REVIEW «
Do you...want to feel...pure feminine rage? Well then babe, buckle the f*ck up. I am still, personally, reeling over how fantastic this book is. And it's a debut?! Gabrielle Sher has me as a reader for life. AND THAT COVER?! Alright, back to business.

This is a spectacular tale of a young woman and her quest for just a single frickin' SPECK of agency. The men in her life, unsurprisingly, refuse to allow her any. Set in pogrom-era Russia, there is a constant sense of tension and dread that gets into your bones as you read this, and you can almost feel what Yetta is enduring.

I am, unabashedly, a sucker for Slavic horror, and the Jewish folklore elements and characters in here were just perfection for me. Sher's writing is ultra-immersive, and the narrator for my audio copy did an incredible job with accents, tones, and specific voices for each character. The story itself is violent and gruesome, sure, but what will really stick with me is the struggle of a young girl to have just the slightest notion of autonomy, even in death.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
Profile Image for Ashley.
293 reviews19 followers
March 8, 2026
4.5 Stars

I know you're not supposed to judge a book by its cover but *violently points fingers* LOOK AT IT!!

This read like a dark fairytale that blended horrific history and Jewish folklore really well. It was brutal, bloody, angry and bone achingly sad. A reflection on how far one will go for love. I personally liked the pace of this and how introspective it could be at times. I do wish maybe it had been a little longer to explore certain themes and aspects of the story, but overall it was an amazing and compelling read.

It's such a STUNNING debut!! Like, wow. Gabrielle Sher doesn't waste any ink, and I can't wait to see what's next her.

Thank you to the publisher and netgalley for the arc!
Profile Image for Kara.
Author 1 book64 followers
November 25, 2025
A refreshing melding of historical fiction, gothic horror and Jewish folklore, Odessa weaves the tale of a father who attempts to bring his daughter back to life when she's brutally murdered in the Russian pogroms of the 1800s. Using ancient knowledge and a book of magic to create a golem, he soon finds that he cannot control his creation. Ultimately Odessa is a tale of grief and the real life horrors of history.

I received an advanced reading copy from Hachette in exchange for a review.
Profile Image for Lana C.
134 reviews14 followers
March 16, 2026
* Listened to through NetGalley*

This book has so many layers that are all so beautifully addressed and a lot of the content is still relevant to today's world even tho it is a historical horror fantasy.

The historical aspects touched on are a Jewish Russian family in the early 1900s who are attacked by gentile Russians in their town and the turmoil and fear that their community has to go through solely based on their religion. You get to see the extent to which, mainly the men, will go to keep their community where they are even if that means sacrificing their own.

Then you get a look into how the women are reacting. They are still being told to be quiet and take care of the home even though their homes are being destroyed just as much as the men's are. A scene that really touched me was when Yetta was screaming and her mother made a comment about how she couldn't remember the last time she could be that loud. Seeing the parallels of how the two genders are told to behave adds such an interesting dynamic and another whole level of commentary to the story.

Now let's get into the folklore! I'm not very knowledgeable about Jewish or Eastern European folklore but this story was still so easy to understand and appreciate. The way Yetta as a golem is described is really eerie and the way she interacts with the "other" adds that extra level of horror.

This book is such a great combination of historical events, religion, folklore, gender roles, and grief all wrapped up in a horrifically sad but beautiful story.

The narrator also does an amazing job of adding so much emotion to each character and really helps build the world more!
Profile Image for Kiki Marksohn.
56 reviews1 follower
December 5, 2025
the best book I’ve read this year! i still can’t believe this is a debut!!! i’ve never read anything quite like it. it’s so creatively written, and i never knew what to expect next. I cried at the end
Profile Image for Brandy Leigh.
415 reviews12 followers
April 17, 2026
The cover is absolutely stunning and the premise showed a lot of promise. Unfortunately, the story itself didn’t quite deliver for me; something felt missing, and it left me wanting more.
Profile Image for ThatBookish_deviant.
2,076 reviews15 followers
April 21, 2026
3.0/5

The cover design is absolutely stunning. 😍Unfortunately I was a touch disappointed by the writing. A lot of potential here but it missed the mark for me.
Profile Image for Anna Dupre.
197 reviews59 followers
April 8, 2026
Deeply profound and utterly heartbreaking, Odessa by Gabrielle Sher is a stellar debut novel, one that is rich with nuance and poignance. Set in Russia during the pogroms, we follow one family's plight for survival amidst a sea of violence, resulting in the death of their young-adult daughter, Yetta. Reeling with grief and desperation, Mordechai, Yetta's father, looks to otherworldly means to bring Yetta back and to keep his family, his people, safe. Yet, Yetta's return is not what is expected as one can imagine, and the fallout from such a bargain results in unfathomable consequences. Punctuated with harrowing grief, Odessa reads with an exceptional originality that outlines every facet of humanity from various perspectives, culminating in a emotionally laden confrontation regarding what constitutes a life, decay, and exodus.

Unpacking a novel like Odessa is a complex matter given the new territory Sher traverses with such grace and elegance. Yes, we may all know the "dead is better," or "came back wrong," narrative; but, Gabrielle Sher does something entirely of her own with Yetta's story that is best left discovered by the reader. What I can say is that this choice of originality is one born of brilliance that highlights so many rivaling ideas of self in light of trauma, hurt, and violence. Odessa is a deeply emotionally-informed story as seen with every character from Yetta to Mordechai to Yetta's mother, Freida.

Sher leaves no stone unturned with her debut. Odessa is a gut-punch on the page for all the right reasons, transcending what we know of female-rage, Gothic themes, and grief-influenced horror. One of the most thought-provoking reads of the year while simultaneously tearing my heart to shreds, Odessa by Gabriella Sher is the kind of book that demands to be read.
Profile Image for Mattie B..
569 reviews21 followers
December 5, 2025

This is an incredibly emotional, dark tale of grief and survival. In times of desperation, what will a man do to protect his family and his people? In times of grief, what would a man do to keep his children alive? This was harrowing, yet so beautifully written. I am impressed by Gabrielle Sher’s luscious writing and how she was able to depict such dark story in such a beautiful way. There were so many spine-tingling scenes; scenes that were violently gruesome that I couldn’t help but get emotional over. This isn’t just a tale of monsters, it’s a story of survival. This was incredible and I can’t wait for the book’s release so I can have a copy of my own. Highly recommend this one.
Thank you to the publisher and NetGalley for the eARC in exchange for my honest opinion.
Profile Image for Jessie.
41 reviews
October 19, 2025
This is a magical blend of historical fiction, fantasy, and horror. Set during the pogroms of 1800s Russia, it weaves together folklore and the haunting reality of persecution. When a grieving father brings his daughter back from the grave, she must unravel a dark secret of his own making. A compelling and chilling tale of grief, family, and trauma.
Profile Image for M✨.
108 reviews5 followers
April 19, 2026
(Two important disclaimers at the end.)

Wow! What a debut. The book starts with pogroms in 1900s Odessa, which lead to the death of a young Jewish woman and her resurrection through ancient magic by her desperate father. However, something not quite human comes back, and there is also a monster with its own plot stalking the woods around the shtetl...

The writing, especially through the audiobook, shines! It is so atmospheric, visual, and evocative; the claustrophobia in all its forms and the characters' terror and dread are so palpable - it grabbed me immediately and I flew through the book. There is a great mixture of historical fiction, folklore and supernatural / horror. Some truly emotional and brutal scenes. Definitely check the TWs. Gothic-esque for sure.

The story is told through 3 POVs of the core family that the story revolves around, which makes for a really interesting reading experience, as you can build a full picture of everything happening, as well as how each character feels, what they plan for, and their secrets, while those remain a mystery to the other characters.

The overarching themes are persecution, survival, love, grief, trauma. rage and loss (what they mean not only for the core group of characters but also for the community they're a part of at large), but also women's autonomy and agency in a male-centric world, and posing the question of what makes a monster. I also found the duality of the FMC, metaphorically captured through the use of folklore, to be a really fascinating exploration of human nature.

And what an incredible cover!!! And excellent audiobook, probably one of the best I’ve listened to in a while.

Thanks to NetGalley, the author, Hachette Audio and Little Brown for giving me access to the audiobook early in exchange for my honest opinion.

4.5/5 ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

———

Disclaimers:


Firstly, this is very much a Jewish history inspired piece of fiction that relies on Jewish folklore, which in itself isn't a point of contention at all and I really enjoyed learning more about Jewish folklore and was fascinated by it.
BUT it was difficult to read this and the horrendous events of persecution and violence towards the Jewish people that act as a catalyst for the plot without constantly thinking of the horrors and atrocities that the people of Palestine have had to endure and continue having to endure.

And another reminder on the side due to the setting of the story: this is a Jewish story from another time, but let's not forget that modern day Odesa is in Ukraine, where the Ukrainian people have also been fighting to survive a completely unfounded and unwavering war from Russia for the past years, (with a long history behind it as well) which barely gets any attention from the mainstream nowadays.
Profile Image for AlyciaRunsandReads.
530 reviews12 followers
March 20, 2026
Well damn that was good.

In this Historical Slavic Horror a Jewish family is fighting for the right to exist in a world of gentiles that hate them. Yetta a teenage girl trying to stretch her wings in a world in which safety requires them to stay bound, her mother who just wants better for her children and a father who wants to stay and fight to protect his way of life. When the worst happens Yetta is killed. Reeling and with the use of ancient Jewish magics she is brought back. Now all must grapple with what this means for the future of their family, their village, and their souls.

This novel gripped me right away. Immediately the stakes are high and the characters feel real. I have not read much Slavic horror and I need to be on the lookout for more after reading this. With themes of consent and autonomy, family, tradition and faith this one really packed a punch for me. You could really feel the internal struggles the characters were grappling with and I found myself empathizing with all of them even as I questioned their choices. Simply but beautifully written, heartbreaking and bloody this is one book that lived up to its amazing cover! And I mean look at that cover. I want it on my wall!

I look forward to seeing what Gabrielle Sher writes next!

Releasing April 21, 2026

Thank you to the publisher and netgalley for the e-arc of this book. I am writing this review voluntarily and honestly.
Profile Image for Bookaholic__Reviews.
1,346 reviews169 followers
May 6, 2026
I loved this story and historical fiction isn't really my thing. Truthfully I was intrigued by it being listed as historical horror, I love horror but have never read any sort of historical horror. The story also leans very heavily on Jewish Folklore which I knew nothing about.

The novel is set in 20th century Russian when it was still very much anti-Jewish. A father loses his daughter to a horrific attack and he makes the decision to revive her using kabbalistic magic. She comes back but not completely as herself, more of a fractured being....a golem/dybbuk.

The story is beautiful but also heartbreaking. One thing that stood out the most to me was how the monster was the least monstrous thing in the whole book, like sure she was kind of horrifying but the people were the real monsters.


I think people who enjoy folklore, Jewish history/ identity and body horror will also enjoy this story.

I received a copy in exchange for my honest review.
Profile Image for the great gretsby.
188 reviews
April 26, 2026
4.5 stars
absolutely brilliant! this was very much out of my comfort zone (mainly because of its horror elements), but something drew me to it when i saw it on netgalley and i’m so glad i went for it! even though i know nothing about jewish folklore and am usually more drawn to very realist books, this story gripped me straight away. it’s so full of emotion and the characters and setting feel really alive, so it was a very harrowing but beautiful read. it addresses so many different themes (family, grief, persecution, antisemitism, gender roles, identity etc) and does justice to all of them. the audiobook was narrated really well and really captured the depth of feeling, though i’m almost tempted to re-read the physical copy because the novel as so dense and there’s probably even more meaning to be gained from it the second time around. this is something i’d literally recommend to anyone, regardless of what genres you usually like to read!
Profile Image for Ebony.
96 reviews2 followers
April 21, 2026
2.5 rounded up

Loved how steeped in Jewish lore this was! Golems are one of the only creatures from Jewish folklore I'm familiar with and I really appreciated getting to see the process in how this one was made. I think this was great with paralleling the actual struggles they endured. Unfortunately, the writing and pacing were not for me. I didn't really care for the story overall and this didn't feel like a story that needed as many POVs as it had.
Profile Image for Samantha (Reading_Against_Noise).
303 reviews12 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 8, 2026
This was so good. I was lucky enough to listen to the audiobook and the narrators did an incredible job bringing this story to life.

This was such a great blend of historical fiction, horror, and folklore. It was also much darker than I expected and there were a few scenes that will absolutely haunt me.

Yetta is such a complex character and her family’s resilience really stood out. They will do anything to protect each other, even when the cost is unimaginable. You can truly feel her father’s grief pouring off the page. The horrors they witness and the hurdles they endure are brutal.

The ending was beautifully done and I can't wait to read whatever Sher writes next.
Profile Image for Sophie.
195 reviews5 followers
April 6, 2026
I listened to and completely devoured the audiobook of this. The narrator did a fantastic job bringing the characters to life, which really deepened the emotional impact of such a tragic story.

It’s hauntingly beautiful and incredibly emotional, with a grim atmosphere that’s full of dread. I kept thinking how impressive this is for a debut. There are so many layers, with complex and believable characters all fighting to survive.

I’d highly recommend this. I’m so glad I took a chance on it after being drawn in by that stunning cover.

Thank you to NetGalley and Hachette Audio for the ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Azhar.
427 reviews38 followers
March 12, 2026
immersive, gothic, beautiful in the way that it explores grief. i thoroughly enjoyed my listening experience of this audiobook.


thanking netgalley & the publishers for the audiobook!!
Profile Image for Anne H.
36 reviews4 followers
March 22, 2026
If what grabbed you about this book was the cover, pile me in the boat because WOW what a cover. 10/10 for cover vibes.

Or if what grabbed you about this book was the plot, yes, absolutely, systematic revenge on murderous men by a female golem?? 10/10 on plot.

The writing itself, I have to say, read a little YA & predictable and I wish this wasn’t the case because I wanted to love this book. But if you’re looking for a dark revenge horror, this isn’t the place for you. I feel like this book is more appropriate for fans of YA historical fiction with a dash of the supernatural?? Maybe just a marketing problem tbh, but the characters all had a sense of sameness and when the language veered into the metaphorical, it felt really overused (reading a face like a map, for ex). I was never surprised by the plot, the language, or the characters.

The narrator of the audiobook did a stellar job with this one & gave a dynamic, well-paced reading.

Thanks to NetGalley and Hachette for the audio alc!
Profile Image for agus.
298 reviews3 followers
April 21, 2026
Odessa is a folklore horror book that follows a family pierced by war and loss.
The stunning cover drew me in, and the amazing story hooked me from the start.

The time period (1905 Russia) was such an interesting choice. I wasn't familiar with the Russian pogroms and will definitely educate myself on the topic. The descriptions were so vivid that they made the reading experience incredibly immersive.

It's such a raw and intense story, heavy with grief and pain, but also strenght and hope. I found the story and the characters fascinating, and the pace of the story kept the momentum going and the book hard to put down.

I listented to the audiobook, and it was great! Absolutely loved Gilli Messer's reading. The accent and voice changes!!! Sooo good! I would absolutely recommend the audiobook since I feel it enhanced my experience so much.

The only reason it wasn't a five-star read for me is that I felt it lacked that emotional gut punch it was building up to at the end. Other than that, highly recommend.

The audiobook was provided by NetGalley, and my opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Chiara Cooper.
561 reviews31 followers
May 4, 2026
4.5 ⭐ rounded to 5.

Where to begin with this novel! Maybe by first saying that it is hauntingly beautiful, with a tragic historical background mixed with religion and folklore. But there is a lot more. This story is heavy, not just because it is set in times of violent pogroms, but also because of the grief throughout the book.

This novel uses the expedient of the golem to explore Yetta’s duality and understanding of her self, oppressed by her mother and father rules and protective behaviour, antsy for freedom and agency.
All of this is laid out through the violence from the gentiles to the Jews inhabitants of the village, and the utter unfairness of it all. Everything starts to change and gets into motion when Yetta is killed. Though that might have meant the end of her story, it’s where her true internal transformation begins, and with her also her family.

This book is yes full of grief, but also a lot of courage and love, and it did move me and pull at my heart. I felt the pain of it all through the precise and descriptive writing, but also a huge sense of relief by the end.

Thanks to NetGalley for a copy and this is my honest opinion.
Profile Image for Libby.
183 reviews179 followers
April 30, 2026
An intense and deeply sad story filled with grief and sorrow, but also with hope and endurance. I really enjoyed this one.

As an aside, Freida has to have either OCD or some sort of anxiety-based neurodivergence (coming from someone who has the same OCD manifestations as she did, literally down to counting to the same number). If she doesn't, I'll eat my shoe. I loved seeing that representation here -- unexpected but really well done.
Profile Image for Cynthia.
1,271 reviews237 followers
March 17, 2026
Odessa wounded me. This beautiful, sad story, although largely fantastical in nature, deals with a heartbreaking reality that’s painful to consider. While Mordecai’s choice wasn’t a wise one, what parent cannot comprehend the agony that drove that choice? While this book might gut you, it’s an important story that is worth the internal damage.

I am immensely grateful to NetGalley, Hatchette Audio, and Little Brown & Company for my copy. All opinions are my own.
Profile Image for The Blog Without a Face.
302 reviews56 followers
April 26, 2026
Clay Does Not Forget
BWAF SINISTER SELECTION
BWAF Score 8/10

TL;DR: Gabrielle Sher’s Odessa is a debut of startling precision: Jewish gothic rendered with the patience of a folk tale and the nerve of a trap. Sher builds a world on exact small details, lets the horror rise out of them without announcement, and trusts her images to carry what words cannot say. The mushrooms are going to stay with you.

Frieda counts her family on her fingertips. Yetta, Ephraim, Mordechai, me. One, two, three, four. Touch the thumb to each finger in turn, whisper the name, begin again. If I count to four none of them will die today. If I buy three fish at the market one of us will die. She does this while her husband is across town assembling a small secret arsenal of clubs and daggers in the back of a furniture shop, and while her fifteen-year-old daughter is slipping out of the house at night to lie in the wet grass with a boy she has not yet agreed to marry, and while her small son sleeps in the bedroom they all share and coughs in a way that reminds her of winters where children died. The counting is how she stays married to the idea that she can still protect anything at all. Gabrielle Sher does not tell us this is what the counting is. She just lets Frieda do it, again and again, until the reader is doing it along with her, and the moment Frieda skips a number the skipping is its own catastrophe.

That is the kind of novel Odessa is. The premise is big and loud. A Jewish family in the city of Odessa in 1905, the shtetl at the edge of the city where the houses lean toward each other like infected trees reaching for the sun, a cantor who remembers when his synagogue was the most famous in Europe, a new rabbi who wears his hair and beard cropped short in an effort to look less obviously Jewish, and a pogrom arriving the way a pogrom always arrives, which is not as a surprise. In its aftermath, a father who has been studying Kabbalah in secret with the rabbi and the cantor for five years will do what all of that study was for. He will try to bring his dead daughter back. The book is called Odessa but it could almost as easily be called Clay. The father and his two collaborators take the daughter’s body to a mikvah in the woods, dig clay from the floor of the spring, pack it into a wooden box the father has built, bury her in it, carve the Hebrew word for truth into the forehead of what they make. The thing they make sits up.

So much, so much big. And yet the novel’s first instinct is always to find the small specific weight. Mordechai, the father, thinks of his wrecked synagogue as having the gravity of a mountain carved by a human hand. Benyamin, the boyfriend, is only ever slightly more present than his own curls. Ephraim, the little brother, is described exactly once as a kitten in his sister’s arms, sickly and bony, and then the book simply trusts you to keep imagining him that way for four hundred pages and you do. Sher’s similes are the kind Flannery O’Connor would have read with pleasure. A secret, Frieda thinks, attaches itself to her like a tick. She can feel its tiny fangs lodged in her skin and its small body slowly ballooning with her blood. That is a sensation rendered so accurately you have to sit with it. A mikvah, one character observes, is a creature with one foot in the world and one in the forest. A hiding place in a wall, inhabited during the pogrom by a terrified mother and her son, fills up with mushrooms afterward. This is the book’s sensibility in miniature. Terror leaves a residue the shape of a garden.

The trap the novel is setting becomes clear slowly. The father has brought his daughter back, yes. He has also brought her back without the memory of what happened to her in the last minutes of her first life. He tells himself this is mercy. He tells his wife, when she asks, that their daughter’s mind is protecting her from fear. What he has actually done is construct a version of his daughter that will be easier to send into battle, and he has done it without asking her a goddamn thing. Meanwhile, unguarded, the original dead body rises and walks. She remembers everything. She wants what the living daughter has been assigned not to want, which is for what happened to her to have happened to her. The book is a horror novel about the argument between these two girls. It is also a horror novel that declines to treat that argument as an argument, because the argument is not one. The body is not wrong. The body is the witness.

Sher is at her best when she refuses to announce any of this. The assault is never named. The word is not there on any page. It is simply the shape of every page, the thing everyone in the room is arranging themselves around. Mordechai keeps calling it something else. He is a man who has decided to call it something else and will continue calling it something else until the world makes him stop. The reader gets to watch what that costs him, what it costs his wife, what it costs both of the daughters he now has. That is the cleanest, cruelest move in the book. The father’s self-deception is presented without comment. We see what he believes about himself and what he is actually doing at the same time, and the gap is where the dread lives.

Gabrielle Sher came to this book the long way around. Hamilton College, a Rosenfeld Chapbook Prize for a novella called Bowerbird, then an MFA and a PhD at the University of St Andrews, where her supervisor was the Scottish poet John Burnside before his death in May of 2024. The dissertation she wrote is called Who Made Us Monsters? Narrative Psychology and the Female Jewish Gothic, and Odessa began its life inside it. This is the kind of origin story that usually produces a novel that has swallowed its own footnotes and cannot stop tasting them. Odessa does not do this. It has the argument underneath the sentences and lets the sentences keep their job, which is to be exact. The book is dedicated in effect to the author’s grandmother Lynn Sher, whose words about a woman who left everything behind sit as the epigraph. You can feel the grandmother in the book. Not in any narrated way. In the sense that the book believes a story told by a woman to another woman over a long time matters and is worth getting right.

The novel does thicken a little in its final third. The barricade at the shtetl’s edge, the rescue of a captured boy in the town square, the quieter female exodus running on a separate track, all of it arrives close together, and the metaphorical weather gets dense enough that you notice it as weather. The dybbuk-sister occasionally speaks in a register one degree more theatrical than the book she is in. Benyamin is more of an assignment than a person. These are complaints at the scale of one degree of tilt on a structure that is mostly standing dead straight. I noticed them. I did not care very much.

The horror here is Jewish in a way horror is rarely Jewish. The ritual that remakes a dead girl is not exoticized. The Hebrew sits on the page without translation that I needed. The women are not window dressing for men’s mysticism. Miriam, who at first appears as Frieda’s best friend and spends most of the book in a small wooden house that looks like a raft out in a field, turns out to have been running a second kind of exodus entirely, a quieter one with worse odds. That she has been doing it all along while the men were in the back room building daggers is the joke the book refuses to make explicit. Both of them count as trying. One of them is actually working.

I am going to be thinking about the mushrooms for a long time.
Profile Image for Audri Adams.
23 reviews1 follower
Review of advance copy received from Goodreads Giveaways
February 21, 2026
Thank you to Mulholland Books and Little, Brown and Company for the ARC!
Profile Image for Lisa Cook.
327 reviews2 followers
Review of advance copy received from Netgalley
March 21, 2026
Odessa is a haunting, grief soaked novel that blends historical fiction with folklore horror. Set against the brutal backdrop of pogrom-era Russia, the story that feels both heartbreaking and mythic, where fear seeps into every corner of a tightly bound community.

The protagonist is Yetta, a restless, questioning girl suffocated by the panic of her family and the ever present threat surrounding them. It feels full of tension and when something terrible happens, it is swift and devastating, and the book pivots into something darker.

Yetta’s return through a folkloric ritual is disturbing and well written. This initially feels like a triumphant moment, but her resurrection brings a slow unravelling, as both Yetta and her family are forced to confront the cost of defying death. The horror here isn’t just in the creature stalking a family but in the grief and desperation that created it.

The writing is lyrical without being too much, and the historical setting adds weight to the story, grounding its supernatural elements in something that feels real. At times, the pacing was a little slow, but it ultimately added to the creeping dread.

This is a story about love twisted by loss, about the danger of wanting too much, and about the things that should never be brought back. Devastating and eerie, Odessa is perfect if you love folklore horror grounded in history.
Displaying 1 - 30 of 330 reviews