When the Silence Screams - An Indie Horror That Cuts Deep: Afraid to Feel by Alex Tucker
Book recommendations Nicole Whittaker Book recommendations Nicole Whittaker

When the Silence Screams - An Indie Horror That Cuts Deep: Afraid to Feel by Alex Tucker

I don’t always read horror to be shocked, I read it to feel something I can’t name. To sit with dread that’s earned, not exploited.

Alex Tucker’s Afraid to Feel is one of those stories. It’s not about ghosts or gore, it’s about the quiet terror of emotional repression, the kind that corrodes marriages, isolates children, and turns love into a load-bearing wall. If you’ve ever felt like silence was safer than honesty, this book will cut deep. And if you’re tired of horror that mistakes suffering for substance, this one might restore your faith in the genre.

Follow me for more emotionally resonant horror reviews, advocacy spotlights, and creative resources that center safety, depth, and impact, especially for LGBTQIA+ readers, caregivers, and anyone who’s ever felt afraid to feel.

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Whispers in the Wallpaper: A Seasoned Horror Fan Reviews Perron Manor
Book recommendations Nicole Whittaker Book recommendations Nicole Whittaker

Whispers in the Wallpaper: A Seasoned Horror Fan Reviews Perron Manor

There’s a particular kind of dread that doesn’t scream—it whispers. Haunted: Perron Manor by Lee Mountford leans into that quiet terror, the kind that creeps in through the floorboards and settles behind your eyes. I found Mountford through TikTok (bless the algorithm for knowing I’m partial to haunted architecture and psychological torment) and immediately bought three books from his Haunted series: Perron Manor, Devil’s Door, and Asylum. The series spans nine books, each one a new descent into supernatural chaos.

While Perron Manor didn’t quite make me clutch the duvet in fear, it’s a solid entry point for horror newcomers—low burn, emotionally layered, and atmospherically rich. For seasoned horror fans like me (I grew up browsing Rotten.com without flinching), it might feel more eerie than terrifying. But that doesn’t mean it’s not worth your time. Especially if you like your hauntings with a side of family dysfunction and occult manuscripts.

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