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Fantasy and Sci-Fi with a Side of Romance
Sapphire: Finished 30 Main Quest books.
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Japanese Gothic
Kylie Lee Baker
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I have just recently finished reading How To Lose A Goblin Ten Days by Jesse Slyva. I would highly recommend it to anyone, and I think should be added to the great library of cozy books 😁
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Post from the A Master of Djinn (Dead Djinn Universe, #1) forum
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(I sincerely hope I haven't already made this request before, I know I've at least thought about it, but I have a bad memory and couldn't find anything when I searched)
Sometimes I lose track of what posts I've already engaged with, for example in busy forums where discussion topics get repeated, or for things that come back across my feed when someone I follow comments (see above comment on bad memory lol). It isn't a huge inconvenience to figure it out unless there are already loads of comments, but it would still be so helpful if the same way that the upvote/downvote arrows get colored in after you use them, leaving a comment also fills in that comment bubble on the card for whenever you see it going forward.
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Japanese Gothic
Kylie Lee Baker
seema TBR'd a book

Japanese Gothic
Kylie Lee Baker
seema commented on crybabybea's review of Japanese Gothic
Calling Japanese Gothic a "dual timeline ghost story" would be a massive understatement that undersells what this novel is actually doing. This is a psychological horror that weaponizes narrative structure itself.
Japanese Gothic earns its title by atmosphere alone. The setting carries a damp, overgrown decay, the house suspended in an unfinished state of rot, a wrongness that refuses to die that becomes a character in its own right.
Baker's prose renders violence in such delicate language, lushly macabre in the way it invites you closer before making you recoil. Tenderness and brutality collapse into each other as Baker explores generational trauma and the costs of inherited violence.
Sen and Lee are torturous minds to inhabit, and Baker holds the reader uncomfortably close as they are put through psychological and physical torture. Sen's narrative in particular is a tragic, realistic portrayal of the cost of patriarchal violence and filial piety: the desperate hunger for approval, the willingness to destroy oneself for crumbs of affection, the rationalizing of horror as care because the alternative is unbearable.
Both narrators are deeply unreliable in their perspectives, but are different enough to feel unique and independently complete. Baker is masterful at psychological tension, existential horror, and epistemic manipulation.
The hurtling switches between two erratic narrators creates a maddening structure that mimics obsessive-compulsive thinking, forcing the reader to develop the same cognitive loops as a narrator with OCD and severe trauma. This framework is shockingly sophisticated, a form of mimesis that both rewards close reading and punishes the assumption that attention to detail will give you any degree of certainty.
Reality constantly shifts, and confusion around which moments are trustworthy creates a compulsion to catalog every detail obsessively, to constantly re-check evidence, to cycle explanations that don't quite fit. The narrative teases the reader through evolving and devolving interpretations, convincing you that if you just think hard enough, the truth will click into place, before pulling the rug out from beneath you and completely recalibrating your perspective again.
Through this instability, Baker explores temporal horror that feels cosmic in its grandiosity. What starts as a chilling gothic horror becomes a disturbing meditation on trauma and the collapse of time. When violence is eternally present, it becomes impossible to differentiate between past and present, memory and reality.
The thematic breadth of this work is stunning and ambitious. Though trauma and identity drive the narrative, Japanese Gothic explores the topics through seemingly every possible thread, braided together to form a deeply moving tragedy.
Generational trauma is passed down through conditional love, patriarchal violence, and inherited colonial violence. Memory distortion and isolation are wielded to force the protagonists, and the reader alongside them, to choose between the harsh truth and an imagined safety, autonomy and complicity.
The brilliance lies in how Baker shows these systems reinforcing each other across time, culture, and psychology, making it nearly impossible to break free without sacrificing everything. What do we owe the people who came before us? What does it take to break the cycle, to choose connection when all you've known is adversity and abuse?
Japanese Gothic will not give you an easy answer, but the ambiguity only adds to the horror. The experience is constantly unmoored, constantly uncertain. Its ambition and seasoned craft make it immediately striking, but it lingers as something subtly invasive. It's a novel that works its way under your skin and stays there, leaving a residue that feels impossible to fully clean, an obsessive compulsion to resolve what won't fully settle.
I received an ARC of this title in exchange for an honest review.