Haunting in the Savannah Shadows
Regina Wixon
Reader Reviews
5.0
1 rating
Liz M.
Apr 26, 2026
A haunting, atmospheric return to a place where the past never truly rests. From the moment Abigail steps back into her family’s decaying Savannah home, the story wraps you in a slow, creeping dread that seeps into every shadow and whispered memory.
The setting is exquisite—Southern gothic at its finest. The house feels alive, breathing with secrets, groaning floorboards, and memories that refuse to stay buried. The line between memory and madness blurs beautifully as Abigail digs deeper, and the tension builds with a quiet, unsettling persistence rather than cheap scares.
What truly shines is the psychological pull: you’re constantly questioning what’s real, what’s imagined, and whether the true horror has always lived inside Abigail… or in the ancient darkness rooted in the hedges and trees around her childhood home.
Eerie, emotional, and deeply unsettling, this story lingers long after the final page. A must-read for fans of atmospheric horror and Southern gothic chills.
The setting is exquisite—Southern gothic at its finest. The house feels alive, breathing with secrets, groaning floorboards, and memories that refuse to stay buried. The line between memory and madness blurs beautifully as Abigail digs deeper, and the tension builds with a quiet, unsettling persistence rather than cheap scares.
What truly shines is the psychological pull: you’re constantly questioning what’s real, what’s imagined, and whether the true horror has always lived inside Abigail… or in the ancient darkness rooted in the hedges and trees around her childhood home.
Eerie, emotional, and deeply unsettling, this story lingers long after the final page. A must-read for fans of atmospheric horror and Southern gothic chills.