Juniper & Thorn cover

Romantasy

Juniper & Thorn

Ava Reid · 2022

A gothic horror retelling of The Juniper Tree: a sorcerer's caged daughter risks everything for a dancer, as a monster stalks the city.

Score
76.0
Spice
🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️🌶️Steamy
POV
first
Ending
HEA / HFN

Tropes

Content warnings

Graphic violenceGoreAbuseBody horrorSexual assaultChild abuseDomestic abuseEating disorderSelf-harmSuicidal ideationViolenceBloodDeathAnimal deathAddiction / substance abuse

Curated signals, not an exhaustive guarantee.

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What readers think

Critics and readers universally praise Reid's razor-sharp, atmospheric prose and her unflinching, non-voyeuristic depiction of patriarchal violence and trauma survivorship. Marlinchen is celebrated as a deeply sympathetic protagonist whose passivity is rooted in psychological realism rather than weak writing. The horror sequences — gore, body horror, cannibalism — are widely described as the book's most visceral strength. The most common criticism is that Sevas and Marlinchen's sisters feel underdeveloped, and the romantic subplot is not entirely convincing. A significant minority of readers warn that the density of trauma and graphic content makes it a difficult, at times exhausting read.

Read it if

  • · Readers who enjoy literary dark fantasy that treats horror as psychological truth rather than spectacle
  • · Fans of fairy tale retellings that dismantle the source material's patriarchal assumptions
  • · Readers who loved the lush, folk-horror atmosphere of 'The Bear and the Nightingale' and want something darker and more brutal

Skip it if

  • · Readers who are sensitive to graphic depictions of child sexual abuse, cannibalism, or eating disorders
  • · Those expecting a romance-forward story — the romantic subplot is secondary and unconvincing to some
  • · Readers who need active, agency-driven protagonists from page one

If you liked this

  • · For fans of The Bear and the Nightingale — like that but far darker, with body horror and explicit trauma
  • · For fans of Uprooted by Naomi Novik — similar Slavic folk-magic roots but gothic horror instead of fairy-tale warmth
  • · Like a Grimm fairy tale read through a trauma-informed feminist lens with the violence left uncut
  • · For fans of Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo — literary dark fantasy where the horror serves thematic purpose

Which dark romantasy heroine are you? Five choices in a forest that wants you dead.

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