Tuesday, March 25, 2025

The Ghost Woods by C.J. Cooke

In the midst of the woods stands a house called Lichen Hall.

This place is shrouded in folklore—old stories of ghosts, of witches, of a child who was not quite a child.

Now the woods are creeping closer, and something has been unleashed.

Pearl Gorham arrives in 1965, one of a string of young women sent to Lichen Hall to give birth. And she soon suspects the proprietors are hiding something.

Then she meets the mysterious mother and young boy who live in the grounds—and together they begin to unpick the secrets of this place.

As the truth comes to the surface and the darkness moves in, Pearl must rethink everything she knew—and risk what she holds most dear.

 

Ghost Woods is told from two points of view, on two timelines that eventually converge since they are less than a decade apart, from 1959 to the mid-1960s.

It begins with a folk tale of a girl who fell asleep in the wood where the trees were so old that their trunks had whitened, and awoke pregnant with a child that wasn't human. It is on the grounds of these Ghost Woods that later become Lichen Hall, owned by a couple surrounded by rumors of a dead son they stole from the morgue, where Mabel is sent to give birth.

Mabel is a young woman who believes ghosts live under her skin. She is shocked to be told that she is pregnant since she has never been with any man. She has never been away from home, and it is unfortunate that Lichen Hall is her first experience. 

A few years later Pearl is also sent to this home. She had been a nurse but lost her job when she got pregnant in the days when it was considered shameful to be pregnant outside of marriage. The home is in a state of disrepair, with mold and mushrooms growing in much of the house. Mrs. Whitlock, the owner of the house is sometimes pleasant and other times cruel, giving an unsettling feeling of never knowing what to expect.

I loved the majority of this book. I had a lot of sympathy for both Mabel and Pearl and I loved to hate the mean girls who were there when Mabel first arrived. If I had any issue, it would just be one line concerning female anatomy that I am certain every nurse and hopefully all women will know was mis-stated. Situations grow more ominous as the pregnancies progress in this historical gothic horror. The pacing gathers speed as the timelines converge, and the sense of imminent danger for all of the remaining women in the home is constant. 

4 out of 5 stars

My thanks to Berkley Publishing for the e-ARC.

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