
Member Reviews

I totally forgot to write my review to this, and I'm sure no one will read it, but this book introduced me to SO many new favourite authors including Chloe Gong!

Each of the authors had unique voices which, when put together into this collection, made the book shine. The stories gave me chills and I enjoyed all of them. I look forward to reading more from the authors.

I forgot to leave a review for this when I first read it. An excellent anthology of YA horror. Picked it up for Aden Polydoros' story but read multiple others and enjoyed them.

Thank you to Netgalley and the publishers for this advanced reader's copy and the opportunity to read this early. Review has been posted on Waterstones and Amazon.
Beautiful illustrations

I really enjoyed this folk horror anthology. Each story was distinct and ranged in degrees of scariness. The Tallest Poppy was my favorite piece and if you are a Shirley Jackson fan it will likely also be your favorite as Chloe Gong’s writing reminded me of the great gothic writer’s. I don’t know why it took me so long to pick this one up, but it would be a great addition to a Halloween tbr!

I was the conversation partner for Tori and Chloe at an event celebrating this book, and was SO glad to have the opportunity to read it. The stories are chilling and honestly hang together so well as an anthology. I don't read a ton of anthologies because with so many different voices the stories can often feel disconnected, reducing immersion. Not so with TGD.

This was definitely something. I enjoyed reading it, the book was spooky with twist, turns and unexpected endings. I would read this again around the time of Halloween. This book gave me goosebumps and left me at times shocked with my mouth hanging open.

not a fan of horror but this anthology surprisingly allowed me to ease myself into folk horror with the lighter yet more suspenseful undertones—instead of the usual heavy veins—especially with excellent storytelling by some of the best, tying individual stories with a strong thread of terror.

I read this a while ago and forgot to review!
Very enjoyable reads by some amazing authors!
Perfect for autumn reading.
Spooky, twisty and creepy.

A solid collection of folk horror aimed at a young adult audience that is both creatively arranged and eclectic.
Or the most part I enjoyed the editor’s selections for this collection, and the authors mostly did an excellent job of putting a unique and often updated spin on a classic piece of folk horror.
You can skip the last two in the book, as they’re the weakest in the collection. It also feels important to mention that while It Stays With You is an excellent story and worth a read, it probably should have included a warning about the content, which is likely to be very upsetting for some readers and feels a bit out of step with the creepy houses and light vengeance that populates most of the stories in the book.
The best of the collection: Petrified, Third Burn, The Tallest Poppy.

Enjoyed this anthology as a whole! But my favorite stories were by Hannah Whitten, Allison Saft, and Shakira Toussaint. (Probably more like 3.5 stars)

I feel like short stories should be complete but live on in your mind as possibilities for more, and in that these hit the mark. But they also sometimes felt incomplete and there was something vaguely unsatisfying about the whole thing. I loved it! But I could have loved it more.

This anthology of folk horror stories was interesting, but not my favorite. I enjoyed a lot of the entries, but some were boring to me and not the best in my opinion. I think it was a great idea for a collection, but just needed some different stories to keep my attention.

I was lucky enough to get an eARC of a Gathering Dark. As someone who is new to horror and loves gothic folklore books, this collection was up my ally. It just took me longer than I would have liked to get to it due to needing to be in the right head space.
This collection follows teenagers dealing with the urban legends of their towns. Some which they themselves are the legend. This book is a wild ride and left you wanting more from the stories due to the fact the idea wasn’t fully developed in what pages they were allowed. A lot of them could have been done as their own thing. And I honestly wish they had. The only one I felt like used what little they had and did well is Chloe Gong and Aden Polydoros who managed to use the amount of pages well. Chloe isn’t really an author I enjoy. But it’s possible that I do like her in the sense of shorter stories.
There’s one thing I do want to mention that I found a bit awkward – forced queer characters. Nothing about a few of them felt natural, just tacked on in an awkward way. As someone who’s queer, it didn’t feel like it was written for queer people per say. There were moments when two characters are making eyes only for the main character to be like ‘too bad I like girls, but let’s keep flirting.’ It’s fine that characters are bi and pan, but instead just kept it plain. Polydoros might be the only one I felt like it felt natural and right. It could just be that some of the authors should have done more to build on it instead of just throwing it away.
I would have loved to see this book deal with actual urban legends that they twist to their own design. But for the most part, they seemed like they were given a prompt based on a myth and made it their own. The Bridge is clearly a take on Goatman’s Bridge. But we don’t actually get Goatman, which was disappointing in my point of view. It was an enjoyable collection that I suggest for people who want folklore spooky books.

As with most collections of short stories, some were more memorable than others! I enjoyed the overall gothic atmosphere of the book and believe it would make a fitting companion during the darker months. A lovely way to find new authors to explore too!

Unfortunately this was a DNF for me. I read 3/4th of the stories and felt I had a good enough impression of the book as a whole. I live horror and thought a collection of short stories would be right up my street. Sadly none of the stories really connected with me and didn’t stick with me afterwards. They were a read and done example & I prefer horror that really is with me for a long time afterwards. Not to say the stories were bad but prehaps just not for me

Thrilled me from one story to the next. I’ve always loved anthologies and this one did not disappoint. Each tale was woven so expertly, almost all of them left me with chills.

Thank you Netgalley for the e-ARC of this title. I enjoyed reading this title. Would recommend for my library.

The cover drew me in, but I wish the stories were enough to make me stay. Some were better than others, some definitely gave me the creep factor, but in the end, I just didn't vibe with this one as much as I wanted to.
Honestly, two of the three stars are for the cover alone - I truly can't get enough of it.

It’s difficult to succinctly describe the stories in this collection, so I’ll just share what the publisher said, “A cemetery full of the restless dead. A town so wicked it has already burned twice, with the breath of the third fire looming. A rural, isolated bridge with a terrifying monster waiting for the completion of its summoning ritual. A lake that allows the drowned to return, though they have been changed by the claws of death. These are the shadowed, liminal spaces where the curses and monsters lurk, refusing to be forgotten.”
I really enjoyed the YA short story collection of Folk Horror, and I feel like I need to seek out more Folk Horror. Like all subgenres of horror, I go through a lot of it I don’t like just to find that one perfect story/show/movie, and that makes it all worth it. Definitely recommend this one. The stories are varied with some decent representation, and they are all unique.