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Curdle Creek

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For fans of “The Lottery” and The Hunger Games, this novel set in a small town with a sinister tradition is chilling in the best possible way.

Welcome to Curdle Creek, a place just dying to make you feel at home. Osira, a 45-year-old widow, is an obedient follower of the strict conventions and practices of Curdle Creek, an all-Black town in rural America stuck in the past and governed by sinister rules and rituals practiced in the name of tradition. Considered blessed, Osira's luck changes when her children run off, she comes second in the running of the widows and her father flees when his name is called in the annual moving-on ceremony. Forced to jump into a well in a test of allegiance, Osira finds herself transported back in time then into another realm where she must answer for crimes committed by Curdle Creek. Exile forces her to make another jump that lands Osira even farther away from home in a rural town in England. Safe, as long as she sticks to the rules, she quickly learns there are consequences for every kindness. Will another jump lead Osira anywhere but back home?

Curdle Creek is a unique novel exploring themes of home, belonging, motherhood, and what we inherit from society in a highly inventive way. This American gothic offers a mash-up of the surreal and literary horror that will appeal to fans of Ring Shout, The Underground Railroad and Lovecraft Country. Battle-Felton’s fever-dream of a tale is strange and layered and quite unlike anything else.

304 pages, Hardcover

First published October 15, 2024

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About the author

Yvonne Battle-Felton

7 books126 followers
I am an American writer living, loving, and learning in the UK. My writing has been published in literary journals and anthologies. My debut novel Remembered, was longlisted for the Women’s Prize for Fiction (2019), The Not the Booker (2019), and shortlisted for the Jhalak Prize (2020). Curdle Creek, my second novel, will be published in October 2024 (Henry Holt/Macmillan US and Dialogue Books/Hachette UK).

In 2017, I won a Northern Writers Award in fiction. I was also shortlisted for the Words and Women Competition (2017), the Sunderland University Waterstones SunStory Award in 2018, and awarded a Society of Author’s Foundation Grant for Remembered in 2018. I also write for children. I was commended for children’s writing in the Faber Andlyn BAME (FAB) Prize (2017), have three titles in Penguin Random House’s Ladybird Tales of Superheroes and I have three titles in the Ladybird Tales of Crowns and Thorns (Sept. 2020).

I have a dual-concentration MA in Writing from Johns Hopkins University and moved my family from Maryland to the UK to pursue a PhD. I have a PhD in Creative Writing from Lancaster University. I love empowering other writers and am the Academic Director of Creative Writing at Cambridge University. have been a British Library Eccles Centre Fellow and a Kimbilio fellow.

I love writing and telling stories. Writing is a form of advocacy. Writing helps me to be a better person. My writing typically starts with a question. When I’m very lucky, a character comes along to help me answer it. I write to understand the past, to make sense of the future, and to help imagine a more equitable tomorrow. I write to figure out what’s next.

When I’m not momming, writing, reading, creating literary events, teaching, and attending events (especially now with so many of them online), I’m recording audio or writing scripts I can read because I’d love to voice a villain one day.

If you’ve read Remembered I hope you enjoyed it. More than that, I hope it touches you.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 70 reviews
Profile Image for Dona.
896 reviews128 followers
October 18, 2024
Everyone loves a supple bride but loathes a supple widow. p7

Sadly, I did not enjoy my time in Curdle Creek, and for reasons beyond the fact that it is a patriarchal post-apocalyptic town full of horrible, self-interested people. I really struggle to stick with the plot, which for the first two-thirds moved miserably slowly, and the last third gave me narrative whiplash. Don't get me wrong, I actually liked the book after the turn at the 60% point. But then the author closed with an exceedingly ambiguous ending, which resolved no part of the book. I regretted finishing the book right there. Maybe this book was meant to be experimental? But I didn't get that vibe.

I recommend this book to readers who like really slow burns, ambiguous endings, dystopia societies, suprise magical realism, or unexpected time travel.

Three (or more) things I loved:

1. I actually love the mashup of anachronism and modernity, like this shimmering and delicious sounding cocktail: “A toast,” I say. I raise the jam jar full of raspberry martini and pretend to clink it against Mae’s raised glass. “May the dead find comfort in their graves. Book XIII.” p9

2. Wonderful dark humor in this one! He’s just right. Fullish head of hair, cold hands, good job, jolly laugh . . . dead wife. p36

3. I actually like the new direction after the turn at the two-thirds mark, but it's not well plotted.

Three (or less) things I didn't love:

This section isn't only for criticisms. It's merely for items that I felt something for other than "love" or some interpretation thereof.

1. I appreciate that the author delivers story details in a natural way, but I'm not clear on this society's traditions, which are central to the plot. *edit The rules do become clear at about the 20% mark. I really like it actually, because the setup, without the familiarity of knowing the rules, is dizzying, disorienting, and increases the stakes quite a lot.

2. I'm 20% in, and the premise is interesting, but I'm sorry to say it's lacking originality. This book reminds me of several books at once, like Shirley Jackson's The Lottery, Margaret Atwood's A Handmaid's Tale, The Hunger Games by Suzanne Collins, and even The Grace Year by Kim Liggett, which is only a year or so old. I don't hate this premise, I just wish something about it jumped out at me, but it all has the vagueness of familiarity.

3. This book moves so slow. I think it's because the narrative spends so much time detailing the character's thoughts and feelings rather than their actions.

4. I don't really understand the setting. It's supposedly an extremely isolated place, with the end of the world going on around them. But they have rum? Martinis? It's just weird, and not in the good way.

5. There are some giant narrative turns in this book, but I don't know if I like the effect. The narrative isn't exactly well-plotted, so there's no seeing anything coming.

6. The narrator is totally unreliable, but again, I don't know if I like the effect.

7. The ending causes clarity issues and leaves too much unresolved, including the primary conflict.

Rating: 💧💧/5 drops from the well
Recommend? Not really, unless you like dystopian settings and narrative chaos.
Finished: Oct 17 '24
Format: Digital arc, NetGalley
Read this book if you like:
🕰 time travel
👨‍👩‍👧‍👦 family stories, family drama
🏚 diatopian settings
📚 books clearly inspired by other books

Thank you to the author Yvonne Battle Felton, publishers Holt Books, and NetGalley for an advance digital copy of Curdle Creek. All views are mine.
Profile Image for Nurse Jackie.
152 reviews9 followers
September 26, 2024
Where do I begin? This story drug me in from the first chapter. Took me back to a settlement-like colony-esque setting that were strict with traditions and rituals, barring all sense of reason. The town of Curdle Creek maintains their barbaric traditions by threats of violence outside the city lines. So when the “lottery” occurs and people of the population are offered up to die to maintain population, they go willingly. This gothic, folklore-like story hits all the marks for creepy stories that’ll make you question everything.

Thank you NetGalley and MacMillan Audio for this ALC!
Profile Image for Brad Walker.
348 reviews20 followers
October 22, 2024
Osira is a middle-aged widow living in the titular village of Curdle Creek under the thumb of her domineering mother: a village elder with machinations for power. Curdle Creek is steeped in tradition: the running of the widows, the culling of townsfolk by vote, and throwing undesirable elements down a well to prove themselves. Osira finds herself the subject of the latter, which ultimately transports her through time and space, revealing to her uncomfortable truths about her family, Curdle Creek, and the world outside.

This book is excellently written and a great introduction to a new-to-me author. I was really enthralled by the first two-thirds of this book--the portion of the story that takes place in Curdle Creek itself. I found the dynamic between Osira and her mother, Constance, and the ways in which the town function to be extremely compelling. I feel like it sort of loses the plot once Osira jumps in the well. We're first transported back in time to the Curdle Creek of her mother's childhood, and later across the ocean to England where she is reunited with her long-disappeared brother, Romulus, in another settlement that is equally bizarre in its own way.

Although things kind of come unraveled towards the end, I still really enjoyed reading this and would absolutely read from this author again.

For fans of...
The Lottery and Other Stories by Shirley Jackson
When the English Fall by David Williams
We Cast a Shadow by Maurice Carlos Ruffin
Profile Image for Becky Spratford.
Author 4 books662 followers
October 4, 2024
Review in the October 2024 issue of Library Journal

Three Words That Describe This Book: immersive, cults, thought provoking

Draft Review:
It’s 1960 in Curdle Creek, an all Black community surrounded by a world filled with violence and destruction. Since the late 1800s, it has been a safe haven for its residents, but that safety comes at a very steep price, complete belief in and obedience to a very complicated series rituals, the most notable of which is the “Moving On,” an annual each vote to sacrifice one townsperson for the prosperity of all. Osira, the reader’s only eyes into this world, is both an outsider and part of the establishment–45 years old, living alone since her husband was “Moved On and her children disappeared, while also the daughter of one of the matriarchs who rule Curdle Creek. Battle-Felton meticulously and compellingly builds the complex world and its unsettling but fascinating rules through Osria, whose access to limited information and life experience, intensely layers unease on every angle of the story. As Osira begins to more actively question whether the town and its vicious rules are worth it, she gets swept away on a journey into the past to look for answers. A thought-provoking, cautionary tale that not only refuses to provide easy answers, but also actively asks the reader to question their own complicity in our current world.

Verdict: Clearly inspired by Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” with a heavy nod toward Kindred by Butler, this compelling and immersive story is a great choice for readers who are interested in isolated cults featuring a female protagonist who begins to question the rules, such as The Year of the Witching by Henderson or Gather the Daughters by Melamed.


A thought-provoking, cautionary tale that not only refuses to provide easy answers, but also actively asks the reader to question their own complicity in our current world.

Verdict: Clearly inspired by Shirley Jackson’s “The Lottery” with a heavy nod toward Kindred by Butler*, this compelling and immersive story is a great choice for readers who are interested in isolated cults featuring a female protagonist who begins to question the rules, such as The Year of the Witching by Henderson or Gather the Daughters by Melamed.
Profile Image for Elizabeth.
16 reviews
October 19, 2024
Many thanks to NetGalley for giving me an ARC copy of Curdle Creek to review.

Curdle Creek is a unique and intriguing horror story that carves out its own lane within the horror genre. It follows Osira, a widow living in the strange town of Curdle Creek. Her husband was killed, and her children escaped their town months before. leaving Osira to bear the repercussions. After coming in second to last in the Running of the Widows, Osira, who has lived as an outcast since her children escaped, finds herself traveling across time and space after enduring the latest humiliation that the petty and cultish leaders of Curdle Creek subject her to.

Reading Curdle Creek was a largely positive experience. I am a huge fan of genre-bending books that don't adhere to what's already been done, and create a story that is altogether new and immersive.


Having said that, Curdle Creek wasn't an easy read for me. Its flashback scenes weren't set up very well, and made me feel that I was just dropped into a past event without any sort of preamble or warning that I was about to go down Memory Lane with the main character. Further, there were too many details in these flashbacks, slowing down the story's pacing and serving as filler without much substance as we slowly marched toward Curdle Creek's focal point.

I understand the function of the flashbacks. They were there to further set up the story, and provide exposition at critical points, but there is such a thing as too much background, and Curdle Creek has that in spades. It strains under the weight of its own outsized history.

For example, there are side stories that don't relate to the plot, nor do they move it forward. The worst of these are introduced, and then abandoned without further explanation or exploration. This was very frustrating, as it detracted from the story that the author wanted to tell by repetitively filling out a background that was beautifully established in Curdle Creek's first two chapters.

The story regains its footing in the final chapters, but by then, its previous problems weighed heavily on my mind, and I couldn't fully enjoy what I was reading. And the ending really felt unfinished. I think it was designed to make the reader contemplate some of the points the author raised throughout the book, but I could have used a more satisfying finish.

In general, I enjoyed this one, and I hope that Yvonne Felton-Battle continues to write. Curdle Creek isn't a bad read at all, It might be better suited for life as a graphic novel.
Profile Image for Anne (eggcatsreads).
156 reviews2 followers
September 29, 2024
With an ominous town with traditions that may be difficult to survive, Curdle Creek lives off the belief that these sacrifices make them safer than anywhere else. After all, you might not survive to become an elder, but at least the town doesn’t have riots throughout the streets, right? What else could you want? (But if you ask too many questions, you may be asked to leave. Permanently).

Told from the perspective of a 45-year old widow, Osiria Turner, struggling to keep her head down and follow all the rules of her town, this book slowly brings you into her world. With many traditions that we only get glimpses of throughout - Moving On, Warding Off, Running of the Widows - we slowly begin to see the cult-like beliefs held in this town, and that no matter how close to someone you are, you can never fully trust anyone here.

For the first 60% of this book, I was hooked on Osira’s struggle as she tried to appease her mother, the town, and make sure that her very own name would not be called for the Moving On ceremony. As she dealt with the disappearance of her children (Did they run away and survive, or are they dead somewhere? And with how dangerous the outside world is, would it be better if they didn’t survive?), to the death of her husband, and her failures to stop being a widow and to become a wife once again - bringing even more shame unto her family. I really liked the perspective of someone who believes the cult-like beliefs of her town, but isn’t a “true believer” and still has a few questions about the practices going on.

I will say that I fully believe I think this book should have been at least 100 pages shorter, or possibly a novella, instead of the current 300+ pages it is. Once we moved to the chapter at the 61%, this book took a rather strange turn that made the rest of my reading experience a bit more confusing and convoluted. Without giving too many spoilers, our main character somehow discovers a strange magic briefly described and insulted throughout the book beforehand, and uses it to travel to a few separate places. However, none of these places make a great deal of sense, or are smoothly taken from one scene to the other, which I thought was rather confusing. As well as the fact that this section suddenly moved what felt like a book fairly grounded in reality to one more in the magical/supernatural sense, which I personally didn’t feel fit the vibe of the rest of the novel.

The entire second 40% of the book felt strangely disconnected from the first 60%, and felt like an offshoot of what we had previously read before. I didn’t feel like how these last chapters ended the story to be satisfactory to the rest of the story, and I feel I would have enjoyed this book had they not been included. As well, there were a few times that I felt scenes could have been cut or shortened, which is why I think this book would have been a better read if the story was tightened to only about 150 pages instead. However, I do think this was an interesting read about being trapped in a cult-like town without anywhere else to turn, and I do recommend checking it out for yourself.

A huge thank you to the author, NetGalley, and Henry Holt and Company for providing this e-ARC in exchange for an honest review.
Profile Image for Star Gater.
1,633 reviews56 followers
October 15, 2024
Thank you Macmillan Audio for allowing me to read and review Curdle Creek by Yvonne Battle-Felton on NetGalley.

Narrator: Joniece Abbott-Pratt

Published: 10/15/24

Stars: 2.5

I was immediately drawn to the cover and the synopsis sealed the deal. Unfortunately, the story is not as clear as my path was to requesting the book. Marketed as layered -- I agree to a point. The dialogue was repetitive and by 40% it was old, and while not seeing the author's vision it was frustrating. At 60% I reread the synopsis and nothing changed.

The narrator was good. Her voice was easy to listen to. I felt as if she was performing and I was clearly missing out.

I found the ambiguous ending disappointing.

I still want to understand this book.
Profile Image for The Shelf Life.
157 reviews13 followers
October 23, 2024
First and foremost, I want to thank NetGalley, Macmillian Audio and Yvonne Battle-Felton for this wonderful ARC.

Curdle Creek has long been a sanctuary for its residents, an all-Black community seemingly frozen in time since the late 1800s. This quiet, isolated world offers safety and stability, especially when compared to the unpredictable, racially charged 1960s that rage beyond its borders. Yet, this peace comes at a cost that they are all willing to pay.

Osira is a 45-year-old widow, who has lived her entire life in Curdle Creek, a town bound by tradition where adherence to strict rituals is the price of survival. One such ritual, the annual "Moving On". This demands that the community votes for one of the resident to be sacrifice each year in exchange for collective well-being. It's a harsh and unquestioned reality, especially for Osira, whose mother is one of the town’s ruling matriarchs.

Despite spending her life within these rigid confines, Osira begins to see cracks in the surface of this supposed utopia. Her husband was "moved on" years ago, and now her children have mysteriously vanished. With her world slowly unraveling, Osira begins questioning the traditions she’s lived by and whether life in Curdle Creek is worth the pain staking price. As doubt stirs within her, Osira takes on a journey into the past, seeking the truth about her community and the rules that have governed it for so long.
Profile Image for Bbecca_marie.
1,073 reviews34 followers
October 14, 2024
Curdle Creek
by Yvonne Battle-Felton
Narrated by Joniece Abbott-Pratt

Thank you so much partner @henryholtbooks @macmillan.audio for the gifted ARC and ALC.

About the book 👇🏽

Welcome to Curdle Creek, a place just dying to make you feel at home. Osira, a forty-five-year-old widow, is an obedient follower of the strict conventions of Curdle Creek, an all-Black town in rural America stuck in the past and governed by a tradition of ominous rituals. Osira is considered blessed, but her luck changes when her children flee, she comes second to last in the Running of the Widows and her father flees when his name is called in the annual Moving On ceremony.

Forced into a test of allegiance, Osira finds herself transported back in time, then into another realm where she must answer for crimes committed by Curdle Creek. Exile forces her to jump realms again, landing Osira even farther away from home, in rural England. Safe as long as she sticks to the rules, she quickly learns there are consequences for every kindness. Each jump could lead Osira anywhere but back home.

📖 My thoughts:

I was not expecting that! It’s sinister, unique, and perfect for spooky season! Whether that’s October or all year ‘round… it’s a spooky must read. It really gave me a dark and twisted Hunger Games vibe and I loved it. The audiobook narrator did a fantastic job encompassing and projecting this chilling story. There were moments I had to go back to reread paragraphs because I’d get lost. That could just have been a me thing but it did happen a few times. Although I didn’t have the same experience with the audiobook. Overall it was an intriguing read and listen and it’s a story with a solid premise, so I’ll be recommending it! Curdle Creek is out Tuesday, 10/15/24!

Happy reading 📖
Profile Image for Kimberly.
805 reviews29 followers
October 17, 2024
"Curdle Creek" by Yvonne Battle-Felton is a great read for fans of the Hunger Games and of M. Night Shyamalan's twisty movie plots. Set in a remote all-Black village, the residents of Curdle Creek will do anything it takes to keep themselves safe, including implementing harsh rules and, if effect, ritual sacrifice. Though it is a quick read, I read it all in just two sittings, this novel is atmospheric and foreboding. The plot is multilayered and kept me turning pages in interest.

However, I found the ending confusing and very unsatisfying; I don't like books that end on a cliffhanger, leaving major plot points unresolved. I suppose the author may be setting up a sequel, but it didn't really feel that way to me. The ending really left me wanting more, and not in a good way.

Thank you to NetGalley, the author, and the publisher for the opportunity to read an advanced copy of "Curdle Creek."
Profile Image for Dana.
1,543 reviews84 followers
October 15, 2024
{3.5 stars}

Thanks to Henry Holt for the gifted copy. All opinions below are my own.

This one is a bit hard to describe it's got Handmaid's Tale vibes for sure. Osira is a middle-aged widow who is entering her last chance to be married via the ritual competition mandated by the elders of their village. The village is isolated and population controlled so marriages and deaths are arranged in a very convoluted way that is not clear to the average villager. Osira is suspicious of the process as her father is on the chopping block for death just as her mother is interested in another man. As she starts to unravel the truth behind the town her life is more and more at risk. This one takes an interesting turn at the end that I wasn't expecting.

If you're a fan of dystopian stories, check this one out.
Profile Image for The Bookish Elf.
1,051 reviews122 followers
October 18, 2024
The Sinister Heart of Small-Town America

In the eerie landscape of American gothic literature, Yvonne Battle-Felton's "Curdle Creek" emerges as a haunting new voice. This fever dream of a novel plunges readers into a warped vision of small-town life, where age-old traditions mask unspeakable horrors. Battle-Felton weaves a mesmerizing tale that defies easy categorization, blending elements of historical fiction, magical realism, and psychological horror into a uniquely unsettling reading experience.

A Town Frozen in Time

At the heart of "Curdle Creek" lies its eponymous setting - an all-Black town seemingly trapped in a bygone era, governed by arcane rituals and an oppressive social order. Battle-Felton's vivid prose brings this insular community to life with chilling clarity:

"Welcome to Curdle Creek, Population 201, One in, one out"

This simple sign sets the tone for the nightmarish world we're about to enter. The author's keen eye for detail infuses every aspect of life in Curdle Creek with an air of wrongness - from the strict social hierarchies to the bizarre annual ceremonies that dominate the town's calendar.

Osira's Odyssey

Our guide through this twisted Americana is Osira, a 45-year-old widow struggling to maintain her place in Curdle Creek's rigid society. Battle-Felton crafts a deeply sympathetic protagonist in Osira, allowing readers to experience the suffocating weight of tradition through her eyes. As a woman who has internalized many of the town's oppressive beliefs, Osira's journey towards awakening forms the emotional core of the novel.

Key Moments in Osira's Arc:

The loss of her children, who flee Curdle Creek
Coming second in the grotesque "Running of the Widows" ceremony
Her father's escape during the annual "Moving On" ritual
Her fateful plunge into the well, launching her on a mind-bending odyssey

A Masterclass in Atmosphere

Battle-Felton's greatest strength lies in her ability to create an all-encompassing sense of dread. The author employs a variety of techniques to keep readers constantly on edge:

Ritualized Violence: The casual way characters discuss horrific acts normalizes the brutality.
Temporal Distortion: Curdle Creek's isolation from the outside world creates a timeless quality.
Unreliable Narration: Osira's indoctrination leaves readers questioning what's truly real.

Echoes of Literary Giants

While wholly original, "Curdle Creek" carries echoes of other landmark works in the American gothic tradition:

Shirley Jackson's "The Lottery": The town's blind adherence to brutal tradition.
Octavia Butler's "Kindred": A Black woman's surreal journey through time and oppression.
Toni Morrison's "Beloved": The lasting scars of generational trauma in Black communities.

A Tapestry of Timelines

As Osira is thrust out of Curdle Creek, the novel takes on an even more surreal quality. Battle-Felton expertly navigates multiple timelines and realities, each shedding new light on the twisted nature of Osira's home.

The Three Acts of Osira's Journey:

Curdle Creek: The suffocating present
The Underworld: A nightmarish purgatory where Osira must face judgment
Evanshire: A rural English town with its own set of sinister secrets

This structure allows Battle-Felton to explore themes of complicity, justice, and the cyclical nature of oppression from various angles. The transitions between these worlds are jarring by design, mirroring Osira's own disorientation and forcing readers to piece together the connections.

The Weight of History

While "Curdle Creek" operates primarily in the realm of the supernatural, Battle-Felton grounds her horrors in the very real traumas of American history. The town's isolation and paranoia stem directly from the very real threats faced by Black communities in the post-Reconstruction era. References to lynchings, racial massacres, and systemic oppression provide a sobering backdrop to the more fantastical elements of the story.

A Cast of Memorable Characters

Beyond Osira, Battle-Felton populates her novel with a rich tapestry of supporting characters:

Mother: A domineering presence whose influence haunts Osira across realities
Daddy: A complex figure torn between duty and love
Mae: Osira's friend turned rival, embodying the cutthroat nature of Curdle Creek society
Romulus: Osira's long-lost brother, offering a tenuous connection to the world beyond

Each character is crafted with depth and nuance, their actions shaped by the twisted logic of their environment.

The Horror of Complicity

One of the most disturbing aspects of "Curdle Creek" is how it forces readers to grapple with the concept of complicity in oppressive systems. Osira's internal struggle - her desire to protect her family warring with her growing awareness of Curdle Creek's evil - serves as a microcosm for larger societal debates about tradition, progress, and moral responsibility.

Battle-Felton's Prose: A Fever Dream in Words

The author's writing style is a perfect match for her subject matter. Battle-Felton employs a dreamlike, almost stream-of-consciousness approach that mirrors Osira's fractured journey:

"I'm crying and moaning 'I love you too, Daddy, I love you too.' He shushes me, hands rubbing my back. I don't want to see his film playing so I keep my eyes closed even when he pulls me back to see if I've grown since he's been away. Away. He doesn't call it dead or Moved On."

This lyrical quality enhances the novel's surreal atmosphere, blurring the lines between memory, reality, and nightmare.

Themes That Haunt

"Curdle Creek" grapples with a number of weighty themes:

The insidious nature of generational trauma
The conflict between individual desires and communal expectations
The power of storytelling to both oppress and liberate
The search for identity and belonging in a hostile world

Battle-Felton doesn't offer easy answers, instead inviting readers to sit with the discomfort these issues provoke.

A Worthy Successor

For readers of Battle-Felton's debut novel "Remembered," "Curdle Creek" represents a bold evolution of her style. While both works deal with the legacy of racism in America, "Curdle Creek" pushes into more experimental territory, showcasing the author's growing confidence and ambition.

Not for the Faint of Heart

It's important to note that "Curdle Creek" is not an easy read. The novel's unflinching depictions of violence, both physical and psychological, may be too much for some readers. Battle-Felton doesn't shy away from the darkest aspects of her world, and the result is a deeply unsettling experience.

A Lingering Chill

"Curdle Creek" is the rare novel that continues to haunt long after the final page is turned. Battle-Felton has crafted a work that defies easy categorization, blending genres to create something truly unique in the landscape of contemporary fiction. While it may not be for everyone, readers who brave its pages will find a richly rewarding, thought-provoking journey into the heart of American darkness.
Profile Image for Lit_Vibrations (Sammesha D.).
291 reviews25 followers
October 26, 2024
Special thanks to the author, @henryholtbooks for my gifted copy & @macmillan.audio for my ALC‼️

Drawing readers into a world where murder is a means for control and disagreeing can get you killed the author’s imagination went wild with this one. This book was weirdly interesting I was left confused and intrigued at the same time. I still have so many unanswered questions like why did they choose to live like this. In the beginning it wasn’t made clear what “Moving On” meant but after a few chapters I realized what they were doing.

This town did some odd things like women competing in foot races for marriage. Being punished to the well and nearly beaten to death. But the Moving On was their craziest ceremony which was a purge type of event and Osira was against all of the towns customs. When her father’s name is called to move on but he runs away she begins snooping and searching for forbidden knowledge surrounding Curdle Creek’s sinister history. Soon Osira finds herself punished to the well and transported into the past.

The town was like a dictatorship society stripped of all common sense and everyone was in purgatory. The author was very detailed except when it came to world building. I wanted more when Orisa time traveled to the past, into the Underworld for judgement, and England before time traveling again. The author did great capturing the emotions of all the characters but I still wanted more of an understanding of what was happening and why.

Overall, the book was okay idk about that ending but if you’re a fan of Hunger Games, Kindred, or LoveCraft Country you’ll enjoy this book‼️

Rating: 3.5/5⭐️
Profile Image for Ethan.
791 reviews144 followers
October 14, 2024
Curdle Creek has long been a sanctuary for its residents, an all-Black community seemingly frozen in time since the late 1800s. This quiet, isolated world offers safety and stability, especially when compared to the volatile, racially charged 1960s that rage beyond its borders. Yet, this peace comes at a cost. Osira, a 45-year-old widow, has lived her entire life in Curdle Creek, a town bound by tradition where adherence to strict rituals is the price of survival. One such ritual, the annual "Moving On," demands that the community votes for one resident to sacrifice each year in exchange for collective well-being. It's a harsh and unquestioned reality, especially for Osira, whose mother is one of the town’s ruling matriarchs.

Despite spending her life within these rigid confines, Osira begins to see cracks in the veneer of this supposed utopia. Her own husband was "moved on" years ago, and her children have mysteriously vanished. With her world slowly unraveling, Osira begins questioning the traditions she’s lived by and whether life in Curdle Creek is worth the price. As doubt stirs within her, Osira embarks on a journey into the past, seeking the truth about her community and the rules that have governed it for so long.

I’ll admit, the striking cover first drew me to Yvonne Battle-Felton’s Curdle Creek. Its gothic mystery vibe was impossible to resist, and when the publisher offered me the audiobook, it felt like the ideal pick for spooky season. But this isn’t horror in the conventional sense—the cover only hints at the deeper, more intricate narrative inside. Battle-Felton has created a fever dream of a novel, delving into themes of race, motherhood, and tradition. The questions the story raises aren’t easily answered, which may shape your overall impression of it.

Osira, the protagonist, is trapped in a dilemma, torn between the life she’s always known and the possibility of something different. The first three-quarters of the novel delves into this internal conflict, delivering thought-provoking drama. However, in the final act, Osira embarks on a time-travel journey that pushes the narrative in a direction that left me more confused than intrigued. Complex themes like those in Curdle Creek are often best conveyed through straightforward storytelling, which the book largely does well. Despite an overwrought ending, it remains a compelling exploration of the allure of utopia and the harsh costs often hidden beneath its surface.
1,606 reviews39 followers
August 26, 2024

I really wanted to like this book better than I did. It has an interesting premise but I found it confusing as there were so many traditions to understand (Moving On, Warding Off, Running of the Widows....). Protagonist Osira is in a difficult position and is not sure where to turn. The novel has gothic vibes and is clearly a dystopia but I ended up skimming the last half as I got so lost in all of the "rites" that my brain hurt.
Thanks to NetGalley for this ARC!
Profile Image for Liz.
732 reviews7 followers
October 15, 2024
3.5 Rounding Up!!

So unique feeling from start to finish. For most of the book we follow Osira, a widow living in Curdle Creek, as she goes along with the daily life and traditions of her strange cult-like town. She isn’t satisfied with the way the town handles a lot of things but still believes in a lot of their ways. She is struggling between wanting to break free and being scared of what is beyond her town’s borders.

The story starts off feeling a little disjointed in parts (perhaps intentionally) and that worked out fine for me. It is the last maybe 40% ish that really upped the disjointedness and maybe suffered for that a bit. We start moving around a lot outside of Curdle Creek and nothing is very clear. Again, this was probably intentional but I didn’t enjoy this extreme almost hazy quality where the reader is just dropped in with no explanation.

Super cool idea, I liked the writing, and would definitely try something by this author again!

I received an eARC via NetGalley in exchange for an honest review.
October 10, 2024
✨ Horrifyingly Mysterious ✨

This was so eerie!! I LOVED learning about the mysterious rules and customs of Curdle Creek! Honestly, that was my favorite part! It was so atmospheric and 100% gave me the heebie jeebies! I was so invested and loved everything up until the last 2% of the book! Without giving any spoilers - the ending was not for me. I will totally be checking out more of Yvonne Battle-Felton‘s work in the future though!

Thank you so much Macmillan Audio for sending me an advanced copy!
Profile Image for Cheryl Deitrick.
103 reviews2 followers
July 1, 2024
Thank you to NetGalley, Henry Holt & Company, and Yvonne Battle Felton for the opportunity to read this arc in exchange for an honest review.

@netgalley
@henryholtbooks
@whyiwritebattlefelton

My Rating: ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ (5 billion gazillion stars)

In the small town of Curdle Creek they have their own way of doing things. The town is governed by sinister rules and rituals practiced in the name of tradition. Mother Opal oversees all and will decide your fate if you are chosen.

This book was really good! I didn’t want to stop reading! It shot right up into my top favorite reads so far this year! This is my first book I’ve read by this author and she is amazing. Just wow!! I really liked her writing style. It was unique and captivating. Overall, the book has a very nightmarish eerie feel that gave me chills and wanting more! I highly recommend it, a must read!!!

#nightmare #chills #scaryreads #booking #bookishlove #curdlecreek #netgalley #henryholtbooks #tbr #mustread #booksbooksbooks #bookstafriends #bookfan #bookstagram #read #readmore #americangothicfiction #fiction #fivestarreads #bookmarks #bookme #henryholtandcompany
Profile Image for Ash.
273 reviews8 followers
September 3, 2024
The premise of this book sounded right up my alley but it was too slow to really hold my attention. I don’t feel like it ever really fully grabbed my attention. I like a slow burn but this one was just too slow for me :(
Profile Image for Katie .
42 reviews
October 27, 2024
Wow. This book was certainly... published.

Look, dystopians are RIGHT up my alley. I love them. I grew up on the Hunger Games. I adore The Lottery. And you know what? The marketing team / publisher / who ever made the blurb really set the bar way too high. What made those books work was succinct, clear, and well-woven world building. Additionally, the characters were developed well and felt like real people. If you liked those things about those other books, do not read Curdle Creek.

One thing Curdle Creek did well was the creativity and ideas. The Widow's Race and Moving On were very interesting concepts however, the execution was poor.  60% into the book, suddenly time travel is introduced, which is only used to visit the town a few decades earlier. A lot of time is wasted here and suddenly we are transported to the underworld. Then to England (ireland?). It's so bizarre to cram all of these settings changes right at the end.

What makes it worse is that the main character, who is a 45 year old woman, acts like an impulsive teenager. She is difficult to root for because she is so immature. It's difficult to remember she is a mother until she reminds the reader because of how she acts. The supporting cast of characters are just completely unlikeable. They aren't villains, they just aren't good people.

Overall, this was a rough read and was no where close to the books it compares itself to in its own blurb. Maybe some more brainstorming and discussion with ARC readers would've improved this book. I'm not sure, but I can't recommend in good faith.
208 reviews2 followers
October 27, 2024
3 stars for my enjoyment
4 stars for an experimental debut

Idk if this book accomplished everything it set out to do, but it was a strange, compelling read. Half fever dream, it can get lost in its own words.



Joneice ate the audiobook tho.
Profile Image for Janereads10.
542 reviews6 followers
October 14, 2024
Thank you, Henry Holt and Co., Macmillan Audio, and NetGalley for my free books for review.

At the heart of Curdle Creek lies an all-Black community that teeters on the edge of cultish devotion, their beliefs and sacrifices as intricate as they are unsettling. The town's population is maintained with meticulous precision, a feat that forms the crux of this enthralling tale. Guided by the enigmatic Charter Mother, the inhabitants find themselves bound by an intricate web of rules and customs that govern every aspect of their lives.

Our protagonist, Osira, emerges as a beacon of complexity in this tightly controlled world. Initially a faithful adherent to Curdle Creek's ways, her journey takes a poignant turn following a series of heart-wrenching losses. The cruel custom of "Warding off"—a population control measure—claims not only her children but also her father, igniting a spark of rebellion within her. As Osira's faith wavers, we're drawn into her internal struggle, a beautifully crafted exploration of belief versus blind following.

The narrative's pacing, while occasionally languid, serves to immerse the reader fully in Osira's world. The introduction of time travel adds a fascinating layer to the story, offering profound insights into the intricate relationship between Osira's mother, Constance, and the mysterious Opal. This temporal element becomes a mirror, reflecting Osira's own journey as she grapples with the age-old dilemma of safety versus risk-taking.

As Osira's tale unfolds, we're invited to ponder alongside her: Is the known evil of Curdle Creek preferable to the unknown possibilities that lie beyond? This central question elevates the narrative, transforming it from a mere dystopian tale into a thought-provoking exploration of human nature and the courage required to challenge the status quo.

For the audiobook, the narration of Joniece Abbott-Pratt was evenly paced. Her voice evoked Osira’s emotions and internal questioning. Check it out for a more elevated experience of the story.

Overall, Curdle Creek is a literary labyrinth that invites contemplation on the nature of belief, the price of conformity, and the transformative power of questioning one's reality.
Profile Image for Tee Marie Reads.
59 reviews1 follower
November 4, 2024
⭐️⭐️.5/5

This was my first time reading a book by this author and honestly I was pretty disappointed. The beginning started off so promising and reminded me so much of the “Lottery” by Shirley Jackson. It was so promising in the beginning and I felt like the setting had the gothic vibes and the crazy traditional’s but it didn’t have the eerie feels I was hoping for in literary horror. The story didn’t feel finished especially from the ending. I listened to the audiobook version and had to replay the last chapter to confirm I didn’t miss anything. I loved the narrator, she always does such a wonderful job bringing the characters to life but this wasn’t my cup of tea!
Profile Image for Marshamariella.
226 reviews32 followers
October 28, 2024
Not my usual norm genre. It was a struggle for me. I felt the author could have explained the various traditions or events I was trying to figure out what each event entailed or meant. Everyone was either cruel, mean or self serving to secure their place in Curdle Creek the only likable character was father.
Profile Image for Lois .
2,156 reviews558 followers
October 15, 2024
3.5 Stars Rounded up
This was a truly unique story, and I enjoyed multiple aspects of this narrative. This is definitely a creepy and dark story, perfect for spooky season. I love that this is set in an all Black town with history. I love that the creepy aspect has to do with Black folks and not racism directly. In many ways, this town was formed as a refuge from the racism in the rest of the US. At the same time, over time, this town has warped into its own horror.

This has many relatable elements even though it's set in a dark but magical space. Osira's struggles with her mother were relatable to many mother and daughter power struggles. Even the dynamic with her siblings was quite relatable to many family dynamics. In many ways, even the restrictive society felt relatable.

The writing in this story is excellent and engrossing. I was always deeply invested in Osira's well-being no matter how confusing the story got. The closing 30 percent of this story is just confusing for me. I enjoy the bizarre aspects, but this ends in a weird place for me.

Joniece Abbott-Pratt's narration of this story was perfection. Her voice has the perfect matter of fact tone that increases the deeply creepy aspects of this story. Definitely consume this as an audiobook.

Thank you to Yvonne Battle-Felton, Macmillan Audio, and NetGalley for the opportunity to listen to and review this audiobook. All opinions and viewpoints expressed in this review are my own.
Profile Image for REGINA.
11 reviews2 followers
October 19, 2024
An interesting story that has underlying themes. Osira captured my interest before the story did, she felt like a person I wanted to care about and help.
This is a story to read with an open mind, I had a continuing leaning one way, then another way of how or what the story was meaning.
I did feel the last several chapters felt rushed and incomplete.
Even feeling that I was wanting more than was being given in the last fourth of the book, I found the story intriguing. I would like to read more by Yvonne Battle-Felton.

Thank you to GoodReads Giveaways, Macmillan Publishers and the author, Yvonne Battle-Felton for the book and the opportunity to read this story.
Profile Image for Kristyn.
61 reviews1 follower
October 18, 2024
I really wanted to like this book more than I did. It has an interesting premise that I thought I would love. Maybe I’m just too dumb to understand what was happening, but I spent most of this listen thinking “what the actual hell is going on?”

Confused or not, I can acknowledge Curdle Creek is a beautifully written novel by an incredibly talented author. I look forward to reading more by Yvonne Battle-Felton.

Extra star because I could listen to Joniece Abbott-Pratt read the phone book and enjoy it.
Profile Image for Honestly Yours.
325 reviews7 followers
October 13, 2024
This book was interesting but it just didn’t grab me. Part of it may have been the narrator who read painfully slow and deliberate. Some of that may have been for effect but for me personally it didn’t work for me.

The description was intriguing comparing it to the Lottery which is was. The first 2/3rds of the book was enjoyable and straight forward with exploring a lot of heavy themes. However the last 1/3 is what ruined it for me. It was like it was written by another author or a heavy handed editor that changed the authors voice. Or it was that so many twists and time jumps and was much harder to follow. Disjointed is the word that comes to mind and listening to it doesn’t help at all.

I did appreciate the themes of racism, sexism, classism and more in home the author wine them through the story without feeling like you were slapped over the head with the hard themes.

While the book fell short for me in the end I think it’ll have it audience and it’s worth it for folks to try it when it comes out Oct 15 2024
I am thankful to have gotten the ALC for free from Netgalley and Macmillan Audio. so I can leave my voluntary review.

My rating system since GoodReads doesn’t have partial stars and I rarely round up.

⭐️ Hated it
⭐️⭐️ Had a lot of trouble, prose issues, really not my cup of tea (potentially DNF’d or thought about it)
⭐️⭐️⭐️ Meh, it was an ok read but nothing special
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Really enjoyed it! Would recommend to others
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Outstanding! Will circle back and read again
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