Gothictown

Gothictown

Emily Carpenter

Enjoyment: 4.5Quality: 4.5Characters: 4.25Plot: 4.5
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A restaurateur lured by pandemic-era incentives moves her family to a seemingly idyllic town in Georgia. The email message that lands in Billie Hope’s inbox seems like a gift from the universe. For $100 she can purchase a spacious Victorian home in Juliana, Georgia, a small town eager to boost its economy in the wake of the pandemic. She can leave behind her cramped New York City rental and some painful memories. Plus she’ll get a business grant to open a new restaurant in a charming riverside community laden with opportunity. After some phone calls and one hurried visit, Billie and her husband and daughter are officially part of the "Juliana Initiative." The town is everything promised, and between settling into her lavish home and starting a new restaurant, Billie is busy enough to dismiss misgivings. Yet those misgivings grow. There’s something about Juliana, something off-kilter and menacing beneath its famous Southern hospitality. No matter how much Billie longed for her family to come here, she’s starting to wonder how, and whether, they’ll ever leave.  


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  • Thoughts from 20%

    20% in, and I can already feel the gothic rot creeping through the cracks. 🦇 What started as a hopeful tale of fresh beginnings is now laced with an unsettling sense of impending doom.... You know, like a charming dinner party where the wine is flowing, but you just know the host has a body in the basement. 🍷💀 I don’t care how friendly these townsfolk are. I trust none of them. Southern hospitality? More like a well-practiced performance. And Billie, darling, I beg you, stop collecting favors like cursed trinkets in a haunted antique shop. Boundaries exist for a reason. 👀

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  • BookAnonJeff
    Mar 21, 2025
    Enjoyment: 5.0Quality: 5.0Characters: 5.0Plot: 5.0

    Did Carpenter Steal My Life? (No, She Didn't.) Hmmm... a book set in the real-life Bartow County (if in a fictional town within it) along the real-life Etowah River and some real-life roads (and some fictional ones). Featuring a veteran of a war named Major. Where an old Confederate area mine plays a major role. With (fictional) long-time area families being a key component of the story. And I, a reader who is a native of the real Bartow County, whose great-grandfather was a WWI POW named Major, who went to high school not far off one of the roads in question (which runs through the northern section of Bartow County in real life, fwiw), who knows exactly where the real-life Cooper's Furnace and several area mines (including several similar to the fictional one in the book, which aren't on many current maps) are located, who can readily identify where the scars of the real-life war criminal terrorist bastard William Tecumseh Sherman's troops left scars on the land that are still visible *to this day*, who went to both high school and college near the sites of famous actions during the Atlanta Campaign, whose families (including all relevant branches) have been in the area for over 200 years as I type this (though to be clear, my dad and his siblings were the first to call Bartow their home county), who knows well how well-connected families *continue* to control the real-life Bartow County via its (one of few remaining *nationally*, per my understanding) Sole Commissioner government system... Yeah... the parallels between my real life and the fictional world Carpenter created here allow me a rare (not *quite* unique, as there *are* at least a few hundred others who have similar life experience and knowledge) view into this particular tale. :) But to be 100% explicitly clear, while Carpenter and I have interacted via social media off and on for a few years now, and while several of my grandparents and older were from her own area of Georgia in the Roswell area she admits in the Author's Note she actually based much of the tale on, we've never actually met and she had no possible way to know *all* of that about me. Thus, it is 100% coincidental that the story bears so much resemblance to so much that I can readily identify. :) With all of *that* noted... this truly was a tremendous book. The motivations of pretty well everyone are pretty clear and believable (if a bit twisted, in the case of the antagonists of the tale). The parallels to The Lottery are blatant (as that tale is referenced in-story), but actually work well here with the story as presented. As things begin to go towards the psychological/ horror, it is done in a very believable manner, with open questioning of reality. The emotions are raw and visceral, no matter whether it be the hope of a new move, the horror of... the horrible things that happen (to avoid spoilers ;) ), the disgust of some other things that happen... it all completely works. And yes, I could absolutely see some parallel reality where the real-life Cassville - the County Seat of what was then called Cass County during the Civil War - actually plays out very similarly to how Juliana plays out here. The tale really is that close to being true to life, at least life as I experienced it as a former trailer park trash kid growing up alongside Bartow's elite. Finally, as Billie's diner is a big part of this tale, I wanted to end the review in a unique manner for me, since this is a rather unique book for me. I'm going to leave you with a few recommendations for places to eat and things to do in and around Cartersville, should you ever find yourself on I-75 in Georgia north of Atlanta. (Unlike Carpenter noting that her Bartow County was *two* hours outside of Atlanta, in real life it is closer to 45 min from downtown Atlanta without traffic, and with traffic... who knows how long. During a snow storm one year, it literally took my dad over 12 hrs to get from his work on the perimeter of Atlanta (on I-285, basically) to his home in Cartersville.) Places To Eat: 4-Way Diner. Historic diner near downtown Cartersville, still retains its "black only" entrance from the days of Jim Crow (now for historic purposes only, to be clear). Jefferson's. Restaurant in downtown Cartersville, inside the same building that houses the world's oldest outdoor Coca-Cola sign on its railroad-track facing side. Likely the closest thing Cartersville currently has to a real-life Billie's, as described in the text. Moore's Gourmet Market. Small eatery near Roselawn (below) and the Bartow County Library, just outside of downtown Cartersville. Restaurants Along Felton Rd. There are a lot of places here, none of which have any historic significance - but the road name does. The road is named for Rebecca Latimer Felton, who owned a plantation in this part of the County before and after the Civil War. She was the first female US Senator - and the last formerly slave owning one. Things to See: Roselawn: Sam Jones' mansion just outside of downtown Cartersville, one of few antebellum houses still existing in town. Across the street is a historic marker noting the former home of Lottie Moon, prominent Baptist missionary to China of the same era Sam Jones was preaching in and the person the Southern Baptist Convention's Christmas fundraising effort is named for. Old County Courthouse/ Sam Jones Memorial Methodist Church: Side by side, these buildings represent much of Cartersville's history. I've personally seen KKK rallies at the Courthouse (and went the other way), and a cousin got married at Sam Jones, which was named after a preacher who was essentially the Billy Graham of the turn of the 19th and 20th centuries. World's Oldest Outdoor Coca-Cola Sign. Along the train tracks at downtown Cartersville. Etowah Indian Mounds: Mounds made by a pre-Columbus native tribe. The site is now across from a cemetery where several of my family members are buried and from Cartersville's main recreation park, Dellinger Park. Atco Village: Early 20th century mill village, its mill has now largely been destroyed, but the elements of the town are largely still intact to varying degrees. The mill was actually one of two that locked its doors on my dad when it shut down nearly 25 yrs ago, but the old Methodist Church still stands at the entrance to the village, along with its old post office (next to the railroad tracks) and the Baptist church (where my family attended for decades) still stands at the dead end of the street that you enter the village on. Many of the houses still retain their original looks, despite improvements over the century. Cooper's Furnace: I mentioned this site above. Just outside of Cartersville and just below the Allatoona Dam on the Etowah River, as you leave US 41 to drive over to this site, if you look into the river you'll see the stone pillars that once held railroad tracks destroyed by Sherman's troops as he moved through the region. New Echota: Technically in Gordon County just north of Bartow, this is the site of the Capital of the Cherokee Nation at the time of the Trail of Tears. There is a relatively small State Park here with several buildings that were moved to this site to show what life was like at the time. And enough with the tourism board stuff - I'm not Juliana's Initiative by any stretch of the imagination, just a man proud of his hometown and constantly in awe of just how much history he grew up around, largely unknowingly. Even as a Bartow County native - maybe *especially* as a Bartow County native - this book is absolutely... Very much recommended.

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  • aVampireReads
    Mar 20, 2025
    Enjoyment: 4.0Quality: 4.0Characters: 3.5Plot: 4.0
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    I have a soft spot for Gothic literature, and Gothictown truly embodies that eerie, unsettling feeling of something lurking beneath the surface. It’s a creeping descent into a town that’s too perfect, too friendly, and too wrapped up in its own history. Think Edgar Allan Poe meets Twin Peaks meets Gilmore Girls... if Stars Hollow had a darker and unhinged twin. 🖤 What I liked: ✔ It’s eerie, suffocating, and impossible to put down. ✔ Pacing: slow burn that grips you tighter the deeper you go. ✔ Historical depth It weaves in America’s past without feeling like a history lesson. ✔ Gothic at its core: Corruption, secrets, decaying mansions, and the weight of generational sins. ✔ A town that feels alive—Juliana is practically a character, whispering to you as you read. What I was not a fan of: ➖ Some character decisions felt a little off. Not necessarily unrealistic, but frustrating in ways that made me pause. ➖ One particular plot device didn’t quite land for me. It felt more like a way to resolve something rather than a natural choice. Would I move to Gothictown? Absolutely not. Would I stop by for brunch? Against my better judgment... maybe. Thank you to Kensington Publishing and Edelweiss for an advanced copy of this eBook.

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