The books that had BookTok screaming - and yes, they’re that disturbing
The books that had BookTok screaming - and yes, they’re that disturbing
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The books that had BookTok screaming - and yes, they’re that disturbing

🕒︎ 2025-10-31

Copyright Baltimore Sun

The books that had BookTok screaming - and yes, they’re that disturbing

By Monique Snyman Booktrib.com (TNS) Horror hype is cheap. BookTok spits out a new “scariest book ever” every other week, and nine times out of ten, it’s all bark and no bite. But every so often, a title shows up that isn’t just shocking for the sake of it — it’s actually nightmare fuel. I’m talking about the kind of books that stick to your ribs, that leave you side-eyeing the shadows, that make you wonder if maybe you should have read those trigger warnings before deciding to delve into the demented stories authors are able to create. These are the ones that earned their viral reputation as extreme horror (according to me, of course). They’re twisted, relentless and exactly the kind of horror I live for. But seriously, do read the trigger warnings before you decide to pick any of these up. Tender is the Flesh by Agustina Bazterrica Probably one of the more popular titles on this list, “Tender is the Flesh” is a dystopian nightmare where cannibalism isn’t just normalized, it’s industrialized. Marcos, stuck running a human processing plant, knows the system is rotten but can’t get out. What makes this one so vicious is how disturbingly plausible it feels — global crisis, government doublespeak, markets adapting. One minute you’re reading, the next you’re seriously wondering if you’d still eat steak if it came with a face you recognized. Intercepts by T. J. Payne “Intercepts” is government experimentation gone to hell. Subjects are locked into extreme sensory deprivation tanks, stripped of everything human, until their minds crack wide open — and so does reality. Everyone who goes in comes out violently insane, but the program keeps running. Payne doesn’t waste words. This one reads like sprinting down a dark hallway barefoot, waiting for the broken glass. A must-read if you enjoy a side of super dark sci-fi with your horror. Playground by Aron Beauregard This is splatterpunk at its nastiest, and the hype about people quitting on page 46 isn’t just BookTok drama … it’s survival instinct. A twisted social experiment turns a shiny new playground into a theater of cruelty for low-income families, where kids become pawns in Geraldine Borden’s deranged game. It’s graphic, it’s vile and yet it’s written with such confidence that you can’t look away. You’ll despise the villains, ache for the victims and question how far you’re willing to follow Beauregard into the abyss. Spoiler: all the way. And for those who already read this one, the prequel, “Playground: Child of Divorce,” was recently released! The Summer I Died by Ryan C. Thomas This is the definition of brutal. Two friends stumble into the wrong cabin in the woods and find themselves trapped by a sadistic killer. What follows is pure, relentless torture horror, the kind that leaves no room to breathe. It doesn’t have the polished sheen of newer horror novels, but that’s exactly why it works — the raw, unfiltered nastiness makes you feel like you’re reading something you shouldn’t. If “Playground” is a test of willpower, “The Summer I Died” is the gut punch that leaves you crawling on the floor afterward. Gone to See the River Man by Kristopher Triana If you thought obsession was creepy, Triana takes it to a whole other level. A woman infatuated with a jailed serial killer agrees to deliver a package to the elusive River Man, dragging her sister along. What unfolds is a descent into pure depravity, where every page feels like it’s watching you back. By the time you reach the River Man himself, you’ll be hollowed out and you’ll love Triana for it. Imaginary Friend by Stephen Chbosky A boy goes missing for six days, comes back “different,” and brings something dark with him. At 700 pages, this beast of a book traps you in small-town dread, cosmic horror and imagery that feels ripped from the worst dream you’ve ever had. Imaginary Friend is ambitious, immersive and proves that sometimes the scariest monsters are the ones only children can see, until it’s too late. Haunting Adeline by H. D. Carlton Call it dark romance, call it horror, either way, this one blew up on BookTok for good reason. Adeline inherits a house dripping with Gothic atmosphere, but the real nightmare is the man obsessed with her. A stalker who doesn’t hide in the shadows — he tells her exactly what he’s doing. That’s what makes it so terrifying. There’s no monster, no ghost, no curse. Just a man who won’t let you go, and the sickening thought that maybe you don’t want him to. Some classics and must-reads in the extreme horror genre that deserve a mention: “The Girl Next Door” by the late, great Jack Ketchum “It” by Stephen King (the films based on this book tend to edit out the “extreme” with this one) “The Troop” by Nick Cutter (think “Lord of the Flies” … if it were a body horror) “Seed” by Ania Ahlborn (actually, anything by Ania Ahlborn will scratch your horror itch) ____ (BookTrib.com is the lifestyle destination for book lovers, where articles and books are paired together to create dynamic content that goes beyond traditional book reviews.)

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