Sunday, February 22, 2026

Movie Review - Mamochka

 


An heirloom doll made in a Nazi factory terrorizes a suburban family.

When Mark Gajewski inherits his mother-in-law’s antique doll, his curiosity develops into a hobby and ultimately an obsession. A chance encounter with a Mysterious Stranger introduces Mark to a radical new philosophy that explains the ugliness of history, one that strips away guilt and forces him to confront a haunting question: what happens when conscience is no longer a burden?






I was invited to watch a screener of Mamochka. 

Mamochka opened the Horror-on-Sea Film Festival in the UK on the 16th and had a limited VOD release on January 27, 2026. 

It is available on Amazon Prime in the US and UK. The distributor plans a larger release following the exclusive rental period. 

The film begins shortly after a funeral.

Mark and Jane, a seemingly happy couple, are returning home with the sole item bequeathed to Jane after her mother's death. Jane is not thrilled with inheriting nothing but the antique doll that she had been frightened of as a child. She wants to be rid of it, but Mark wants to find out about the doll's history first and whether it could be worth money.

Mamochka is a psychological horror/thriller about obsession. What is real and what is the product of a troubled mind?  As Mark goes from curiosity to fixation, the consequences begin to take a toll on every aspect of his life. 

Nightmares and darkly lit stairways added a creepy vibe. The soundtrack was oddly cheery-sounding, which made the spooky happenings even more jarring. Stanley Trub, who played Mark and Jane's young son Brian, is almost too adorable for horror movies, and yet he played his part well enough to give me a chill. A somewhat ambiguous ending leaves it open to the viewer's interpretation, but to me that's fine because I get to decide for myself what I want it to mean. Honestly, this is a weird one, but so am I because I enjoyed it.


I gave this 8 out of 10 stars at IMDB

View the trailer here

DIRECTED BY: Vilan Trub

WRITTEN BY: Vilan Trub

STARRING: Dino Castelli, Maya Murphy, Joshua Danskin

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

You Did Nothing Wrong by C.G. Drews


Single mother Elodie’s life has become a fairy tale. She’s met Bren, equal parts golden-retriever devoted and sinfully handsome. He’s whisked her and her autistic son, Jude, to the crumbling family house he’s renovating. She has a new husband, a new house, and a new baby on the way. Everything is perfect.

Then Jude claims he can hear voices in the walls. He says their renovations are “hurting” the house. Even Elodie can’t ignore it–something strange is going on. The question is, is it with the house, or with her son?

Then the one secret Elodie has been hiding is revealed, and no one is safe anymore.

A pulse-pounding, clever take on the haunted house novel, You Did Nothing Wrong examines the complexities of motherhood and the twisted bonds of family as it races to its shocking ending.


 This will be a short review because I don't even know how to speak about the plot without spoiling it for you.  I won't even try. I will just say that when you think you have it figured out, you don't. It is a dark and twisty gut punch. At the end of the book, the author says that when you finish, you may feel wretched or haunted. So congratulations, C.G. Drews, if that was your intent, you have succeeded. You did this to me on purpose.

This is one of the most nerve-wracking, unsettling, emotionally jarring books I have ever read. I did not have a moment's peace while reading this. I frequently put it down because I needed a break, then picked it back up because I could not get it out of my mind. I still can't. I don't know what was harder on me, the anxiety of not knowing how it would end, or the devastating finish when I found out.

5 out of 5 stars

My thanks to St. Martin's Press for the e-ARC

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About the author


Friday, February 13, 2026

It Came from the Floodwaters by Seann Barbour

"So you're like a vampire? All we have to do is survive until morning?"

Silence settled over the apartment as everyone processed this. The Elder "You won't."

Tam is alone in their Savannah apartment when a hurricane blows in. Rain falls, streets flood. When water comes pouring into the building's lobby, it brings with it an old pine box. Inside that box is something ancient, something evil. It arises, and it begins its feast.

Now, as people are dying, the survivors gather together in one small apartment, desperate to live through the storm and live through the night. But the evil lurks right outside their door. It's hungry, it's patient, and it has all night long to kill every last one of them.

 



A diverse cast of characters with nothing in common except for the apartment building they reside in are brought together with one common goal... to survive the night.

Two life-threatening situations are occurring at once. The flood waters are rising, and so are the dead. Or should I say the undead? The hurricane is only one danger the residents will face. As the water rises, trapping them in the building with no way to escape and no way to call for help, it carries with it a coffin that has something hungry inside. 

Storms are one of my favorite horror tropes. Nothing grabs my interest quicker than a dark and stormy night. When a supernatural element is thrown in, with no means of escape, it's an extra added bonus. This was a quick and intense read that takes place over the course of a single evening in the lives of people who probably would not normally have bothered with each other. The fast pace and clash of personalities drew me in right away. This "Elder" that has come out of the coffin seems to have a connection to one of the characters. I wish that had been explored in more depth, but otherwise I would not change a thing.

4 out of 5 stars

My thanks to Seann Barbour for the paperback copy

Available for pre-order



Thursday, February 12, 2026

Tales From Halloween Land by Kevin J. Kennedy

 

Tales From Halloween Land: Two brand new short stories and a novelette

Enter Halloween Land, a carnival where nightmares come to life. Three never-before-released stories. Sinister, surreal, and darkly twisted, these tales will test courage, morality, and what it truly means to survive… if you dare step inside.

Three teens enter the eerie carnival Halloween Land and become trapped in a sinister tent. There, a living clown jack-in-the-box named Koko McKillington III forces them into a deadly game: one will leave, one will stay, and one will die. Facing horrifying choices and grotesque horrors behind mysterious doors, the boys quickly realize survival comes at a horrifying cost, testing their courage—and their humanity.

Melissa, a teenage girl, who was killed and resurrected by the sinister, otherworldly carnival Halloween Land—transformed into a powerful yet unstable clown. Bound to the carnival and gifted with superhuman abilities, she cannot escape, but her mind remains her own, mostly. As she navigates the ever-shifting, grotesque, and surreal landscape of Halloween Land, Melissa struggles to retain fragments of her humanity while embracing her newfound chaos. Trapped in a place she hates, she becomes a rogue force, turning her supernatural skills and unpredictable mind against the carnival itself. (Takes place directly after the events of The Clown novella.)

Frank and Anna’s quiet, happy life with their son Billy is shattered when he vanishes at a traveling carnival—along with his friends and their parents—leaving no trace and no answers. Grief drives them apart, their lives descending into despair, until a mysterious, otherworldly clown suddenly appears in their home. Beautiful, unnerving, and disturbingly aware of her own fragmented identity, she hints at the dark, supernatural forces behind Billy’s disappearance—and that their nightmare has only just begun.


This was my first visit to Halloween Land.  Not having read the previous books, I still feel like I have a decent grasp of the goings on in this creepy carnival from these stand-alone tales.

The carnival itself is a mysterious living entity. It pops up wherever it pleases and disappears when it gets what it came for, luring in unsuspecting patrons so it can feed on their souls. Those who are not chosen will be allowed to leave, but have very little memory of having attended, or of the strange looking carnies who work the rides and concessions.

In the first story, three teenagers who have never visited any carnival before are mesmerized by the sights and sounds at Halloween Land. There are so many games and rides, not to mention the smell of all that delicious food. If only they had not noticed a beautiful woman at a partially obscured tent, they might have had a night to remember fondly instead of a night to regret.

In the next story, we meet Melissa, or what used to be Melissa before the carnival murdered her friends and tried to bend her to its will. She is something different now, trapped by the carnival in a life she can't escape, but never under its full control. 

In the final story, a happy family is destroyed when the parents let their only son go to the carnival with friends. Their dread turns to panic and then despair the longer they are left waiting for him to come home. This was my favorite of the three tales. I found it to be more suspenseful and emotionally charged than the first two, and I enjoyed the way it tied together with a previous character.

4 out of 5 stars

My thanks to the author for the e-ARC

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About the author