HOWL Society member @wytwavedarling assembled this list of haunted / bad house books. We vote for one of them to be part of our weekly Book Club discussion! House Calls: 4 Haunted / Bad House Books. Join our Discord to be part of the club.

[M]ost scholarship conflates the terms ‘bad house’ and ‘haunted house,’
It’s the one trope I can’t resist–a bad or haunted house. The Haunting of Hill House and The Shining are forever favorites of mine, as I’m sure they are for some of you reading this, but the trope goes well beyond these classics.
In grad school, I did an independent study focused on bad houses (so much rarer than haunted houses, but oh so addictive), and quickly discovered that an attempt at such research is itself like wandering the halls of a changing house; most scholarship conflates the terms ‘bad house’ and ‘haunted house,’ many book blurbs and reviews make it impossible to tell what you’re moving into before reading a book all the way through, and when it comes right down to it, books themselves sometimes leave the matter up for debate.
But as infuriating as the attempt at scholarship was, I fell ever more in love with bad and haunted houses both–not to mention the houses that are neither, but which talented authors make into wonderfully creepy backdrops for horrors of all sorts. There are endless choices out there, but I’ve aimed to make a list of some works that have been quietly staring at me from my shelves, none of which I’ve yet read. I wonder what these houses are like….
– @wytwavedarling
1. Slade House by David Mitchell
From Goodreads:
Keep your eyes peeled for a small black iron door.
Down the road from a working-class British pub, along the brick wall of a narrow alley, if the conditions are exactly right, you’ll find the entrance to Slade House. A stranger will greet you by name and invite you inside. At first, you won’t want to leave. Later, you’ll find that you can’t. Every nine years, the house’s residents — an odd brother and sister — extend a unique invitation to someone who’s different or lonely: a precocious teenager, a recently divorced policeman, a shy college student. But what really goes on inside Slade House? For those who find out, it’s already too late…
Spanning five decades, from the last days of the 1970s to the present, leaping genres, and barreling toward an astonishing conclusion, this intricately woven novel will pull you into a reality-warping new vision of the haunted house story—as only David Mitchell could imagine it.
Why?
“I admit that I didn’t make it through the one David Mitchell book I tried, but nevertheless, I couldn’t resist picking this one up simply because of the premise. I can’t imagine a better way to explore it than with HOWLS, and the fact that it seems to have gotten mixed reviews from the members who’ve read it make me all the more curious. It’s also readily available in ebook and audiobook, and just the right length for our book club.”
2. The Forever House by Tim Waggoner
From Goodreads:
In Rockridge, Ohio, a sinister family moves into a sleepy cul de sac. The Eldreds feed on the negative emotions of humans, creating nightmarish realms within their house to entrap their prey. Neighbors are lured into the Eldreds’ home and faced with challenges designed to heighten their darkest emotions so their inhuman captors can feed and feed well. If the humans are to have any hope of survival, they’ll have to learn to overcome their prejudices and resentments toward one another and work together. But which will prove more deadly in the end, the Eldreds . . . or each other?
Why?
“My first awareness of Waggoner came when I went to a talk he gave to a writer’s group a few years ago, and I’ve been meaning to try his work ever since. This seems like the perfect place to start, considering the house element on top of the fact that I’m always seeking out work where the supernatural feeds off of or affects emotions. It’s also readily available in ebook format, though I have to note that it is NOT available in audiobook at this time.”
3. The House by the Cemetery by John Everson
From Goodreads:
Rumor has it that the abandoned house by the cemetery is haunted by the ghost of a witch. But rumors won’t stop carpenter Mike Kostner from rehabbing the place as a haunted house attraction. Soon he’ll learn that fresh wood and nails can’t keep decades of rumors down. There are noises in the walls, and fresh blood on the floor: secrets that would be better not to discover. And behind the rumors is a real ghost who will do whatever it takes to ensure the house reopens. She needs people to fill her house on Halloween. There’s a dark, horrible ritual to fulfill. Because while the witch may have been dead… she doesn’t intend to stay that way.
Why?
“I’m a little bit nervous about the goodreads ‘splatterpunk’ tag on this one, but how can I resist a paranormal novel that’s got a haunted house as well as an element of witchcraft? Not to mention Halloween? Simply put, I can’t resist, so let’s see what’s inside. Plus, this book is readily available in both ebook and audiobook, and it’s a great length for our book club.”
4. House of Skin by Jonathan Janz
From Goodreads:
Myles Carver is dead. But his estate, Watermere, lives on, waiting for a new Carver to move in. Myles’s wife, Annabel, is dead too, but she is also waiting, lying in her grave in the woods. For nearly half a century she was responsible for a nightmarish reign of terror, and she’s not prepared to stop now. She is hungry to live again… and her unsuspecting nephew, Paul, will be the key.
Julia Merrow has a secret almost as dark as Watermere’s. But when she and Paul fall in love they think their problems might be over. How can they know what Fate – and Annabel – have in store for them? Who could imagine that what was once a moldering corpse in a forest grave is growing stronger every day, eager to take her rightful place amongst the horrors of Watermere?
Why?
“I just recently read one of Janz’s other books, and couldn’t put it down. Add to that experience the title of this one and the idea of this Watermere, and I can’t wait to give this one a try. Another reason for it to make the list? It’s a great length for HOWLS, and the book is also readily available in ebook and audiobook.”
5. Malice House by Megan Shepherd
From Goodreads:
Of all the things aspiring artist Haven Marbury expected to find while clearing out her late father’s remote seaside house, Bedtime Stories for Monsters was not on the list. This secret handwritten manuscript is disturbingly different from his Pulitzer-winning works: its interweaving short stories crawl with horrific monsters and enigmatic humans that exist somewhere between this world and the next. The stories unsettle but also entice Haven, practically compelling her to illustrate them while she stays in the house that her father warned her was haunted. Clearly just dementia whispering in his ear . . . right?
Reeling from a failed marriage, Haven hopes an illustrated Bedtime Stories can be the lucrative posthumous father-daughter collaboration she desperately needs to jump-start her art career. However, everyone in the nearby vacation town wants a piece of the manuscript: her father’s obsessive literary salon members, the Ink Drinkers; her mysterious yet charming neighbor, who has a tendency toward three a.m. bonfires; a young barista with a literary forgery business; and of course, whoever keeps trying to break into her house. But when a monstrous creature appears under Haven’s bed right as grisly deaths are reported in the nearby woods, she must race to uncover dark, otherworldly family secrets―completely rewriting everything she ever knew about herself in the process.
Why?
“This one’s a little bit long, but with all of the other house books on my list being from male writers, I decided it was only right to make sure this one made the list anyway. Plus, I’ve been meaning to read it since it came out, and it’s available in audiobook and ebook, so I’ll leave it to you to make the final decisions here…”
All books are linked to our affiliate site at Bookshop.org. A portion of proceeds from these links helps to fund this website and our publishing opportunities.