BROODING 🌑 MYSTERIOUS 🕯️ FEROCIOUS 🩸 A brooding Gothic tale wrapped in shadows, secrets, and slow-burning dread. We follow Asher Todd as she arrives at Morwood Grange to take her place as governess, carrying knowledge of herbs and remedies—and the weight of her own past. The estate is alive with whispers, filled with locked doors, family politics, and the kind of atmosphere that feels heavy with old grief and unspoken betrayals. A.G. Slatter brings all the elements I crave in a Gothic novel (dark corridors, secrets pressed into every corner, and a protagonist who is clever, flawed, and unforgettable) while weaving them seamlessly with the magic, curses, and creatures of dark fantasy. The result is tense, tragic, and completely consuming.
I don’t really know where to begin with expressing how much I adore this book. I’m always aware of the risk of gassing up a book so much that it sets impossible expectations, but this one felt truly special.
I have an affinity for Gothic stories, and the way I like them is in the most classic style: slow, broody, forbidding, dark, dreary, and steeped in endless questions. I love Gothic fiction that takes its time, full of hidden rooms, betrayal, and uncertainty. Most of all, I love when you really get to live inside the mind of the main character. A.G. Slatter never lets me down in this regard, and this book gave me everything I crave in Gothic fictios, PLUS the delicious addition of dark fantasy. This book is a perfect marriage of genres: you get the slow burn and atmosphere of a Gothic novel, but layered with witches, werewolves, ghosts, magic, and enchantments. It’s sharp, cunning, and so much fun to read.
"‘Well, children can be fanciful,’ I say as if I don’t know better. As if I don’t know that much of the strangeness children see is real, that it peeks from the darkness because it knows adults don’t listen to young ones."
When I first picked up The Path of Thorns, the cover actually threw me off a little. The flowing dress of the protagonist, the werewolf silhouette, the lavender and thorns, the hands of glory—it all gave me more of a "cute" dark fairy-tale or even YA vibe. And while I don’t dislike YA, this book is far from it. Instead, it’s steeped in tension, sex, murder, generational trauma, narcissistic parents, selfishness, and heavy tragedy. The main character, Asher Todd, is morally gray in a way that felt deeply relatable to me. She’s intelligent, complex, far from perfect; and I couldn’t adore her more. She’s now at the top of my list of Slatter’s unforgettable characters.
"...I realise that most people will remain somewhere as long as they can, no matter that it's no good for them. Home might be a pile of shit, but they'll stay because it's warm and the smell is familiar and they'll cling to that. The cling to it because leaving, walking into the rain to be washed clean would mean being cold and wet, walking away from what you know will mean being lost. No matter that you will make a new way, a new path—the majority of folk don't get beyond their fear of change."
The setting is everything you could want: a creepy old house with a personality of its own. You can feel the crackle of flames in the kitchen hearth, see the gardens and feel the atmosphere pressing in from every room. I’m always impressed when an author builds a whole world while really confining us to mainly one place. And while the fantasy elements are strong, the setting stays deeply true to the Gothic tradition... and I ate. It. Up.
As always with Slatter’s work, there are stories within stories threaded throughout. Each one has weight and meaning, and they left me eager to dive deeper into her short story collections (some of which are already waiting on my shelves). She is truly a master storyteller; whether in a single paragraph, a few pages, a novel, or an entire anthology... The way she pieces together tiny details that build toward something greater is remarkable. I often found myself tabbing passages or jotting down notes (something I don’t always do, even with epic fantasy) because I knew that with her, those details would matter later. The message would matter. Every time.
"Some of the histories I read told how folk deserted the cunning women and witches, turned their backs and chose modernity. But the truth was that the Church hunted them, made them hated, made them dead. Drowned them, burned them, hanged them."
In my eyes, this book is about female rage, feminism, power, control, and breaking free. You can tell why Slatter takes her time with it; these themes matter to her, and the weight of them shows in every choice she makes as a storyteller. While I was inside Asher Todd’s perspective, I also felt the presence of the author herself: her voice, her anger, her sharp observations of the world. (I should be clear that I’m speculating here, I can’t say for sure that this is what’s happening, but in everything I’ve read from Slatter, this is what I feel in my heart.) I feel like I’m there with her in the pain, the honesty, the reality, and in the way she puts women down on paper. The deep connection I have to how she writes them—raw, unflinching, and relatable—is what makes it so powerful. It feels like Slatter pours pieces of her own life, the experiences of women around her, and her understanding of power into this book... and it’s fucking powerful in itself. As a woman, it was impossible not to root for Asher Todd. And that is part of why I hold so much respect for Slatter herself; because that kind of truth on the page doesn’t happen by accident. Her dedication to her craft, to the complexity of her characters, to telling their stories as women in worlds built against them, and to the Sourdough universe she’s building is what leaves me in awe.
I usually try to keep my reviews more objective, but it’s hard not to get personal here because this story resonated so strongly with me. I’m sad that it’s over—though in a way, it’s not. This universe continues to expand, and knowing there are so many stories I own and have yet to read, and even more stories to come from the Sourdough Universe, makes me feel lucky.
I know I’m running the risk of building expectations quite high, but here’s what I’ll say: if you love Gothic fiction, dark fantasy, morally gray characters, and stories that fully immerse you in the daily rhythms and politics of a house and its family, you will probably adore, or at least enjoy, this book. (In the words of the author herself, think Jane Eyre meets Frankenstein (and dash in some Grimm's Fairy Tales.))
That said, if you struggle with slow pacing (stories that take their time, with reveals that come in waves before pulling you back into the depths) you may not love it. For me, that ebb and flow is exactly what I crave, but I know not everyone feels the same. However, still urge you to give it a shot.
A.G. Slatter has become, without question, one of my absolute favorite Gothic fiction writers. She writes the Gothic my heart yearns for. 🖤🩶