A Horror Novel
Some towns don't forget their dead.
They consume them.
When Wren Voss returns to the sinking Louisiana town of Brackish Hollow, she's searching for answers about her sister's disappearance. What she finds instead is a silence so complete it feels engineered—an entire community bound by omission, memory carefully edited, history deliberately erased.
At the edge of the marsh stands a ruined sanitarium the town insists never existed. A building that doesn't just take lives—it feeds on memory, identity, and grief. Those who enter don't always die. Some return hollowed. Others vanish from records entirely, reduced to clerical errors and "unreliable census data."
As Wren digs deeper, she uncovers a generational pact meant to keep the horror contained—and realizes the cost has always been human. The truth doesn't want to stay buried. It wants to be remembered. And it's still hungry.
The Marsh's Maw is a slow-burn, atmospheric horror novel steeped in Southern gothic dread, psychological terror, and existential unease. It explores grief, complicity, and what happens when survival demands silence.
Perfect for readers who love:
- Liminal spaces and creeping dread
- Abandoned institutions and buried town secrets
- Psychological and folk horror with emotional weight
- Stories where the setting itself is the monster
Once the marsh knows your name, it never lets you go.