Friday, June 19, 2026

Thirst by Darren Simpson

Nobody talks about the strange happenings in Maimsbury. No one speaks of the hooded figures glimpsed in the woods, nor the children's game that went so horribly wrong. But most of all, nobody dares whisper their doubts about the river they have worshipped for centuries.

Like everyone in Maimsbury, Gorse is used to the sacrifices made every spring to the River Yeelde. The life of a farm animal - in return for a year of plenty - seems a fair trade. That is, until a tragedy leads Gorse to a blood-curdling discovery.

Because this year is a Brim Year, and after giving so much, the river needs more than an animal's life to sate its thirst...





* Trigger Warning (non-graphic) animal abuse *



 Three young friends are playing a game in the woods, but only two of them will ever make it home. The villagers of  Maimsbury hold an ominous secret. They know why people disappear from time to time.
Then there is Faye, a girl from a different town where crops have failed, hunger is rampant, and her family is starving. She sees her mother eating less and less so that the few pitiful scraps they have can be shared by Faye and her little brother. She is determined to go out on her own to find work. She makes her way to Maimsbury, where food and work seem plentiful, but so is the danger to outsiders this year.

Thirst is a YA coming-of-age folk horror that pulled me in immediately. The strange customs that everyone is willing to go along with unquestioningly begin to falter when one teen discovers the much darker reason his mother has for making sacrifices to the River Yeelde. I loved the atmosphere and the message about making hard choices and standing up for what you believe in, even when the odds are against you, as one teen discovers that just because it's the way things have always been done doesn't make it right.

My thanks to Pushkin Children's Books.




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