17 books to read if you watched 'Nightbitch'
Local booksellers share their recommendations for fans of the book-to-screen adaptation, starring Amy Adams.
Books
Want to sink your teeth into stories that unsettle and transform? Local booksellers share their recommendations for fans of the book-to-screen adaptation, starring Amy Adams.
This image, released by Searchlight Pictures, shows Amy Adams in a scene from "Nightbitch." (Searchlight Pictures via AP)
By Annie Jonas
January 14, 2025 | 5:00 AM
1 minute to read
If you watched âNightbitch,â the darkly comedic and unsettling film starring Amy Adams as a young mother who begins to suspect she is turning into a dog, you might have found yourself gripped by its remarkable mixture of body horror, psychological unraveling, and unashamed female rage.Â
The movie, based on the magical realism-style novel of the same name by Rachel Yoder, chronicles the increasingly bizarre transformation of a suburban stay-at-home mother whose life takes a surreal turn when her maternal instincts begin to manifest in canine form.
The adaptation packs an emotional punch while subtly critiquing the pressures placed on women â and particularly, on mothers. Itâs both deeply unsettling and darkly funny, balancing its moments of grotesque absurdity with poignant reflections on the complexities of motherhood and selfhood.
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If the film left you craving more narratives that blend the strange with the deeply personal â stories that explore the intersection of self-identity, bodily transformation, and psychological exploration â thereâs a whole world of literature that captures that same eerie, enthralling energy.Â
To help guide your next literary adventure, Boston.com reached out to two booksellers for their recommendations: Caroline Sheridan, owner of Side Quest Books and Games, a fantasy-inspired shop for books and indie role-playing games centering underrepresented creators; and Ryan Clark, the horror bookseller and marketing manager at Gibsonâs Bookstore in Concord, New Hampshire.Â
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Whether itâs through surreal stories of women facing the unknown in their own bodies, or narratives that unearth the hidden darkness in everyday lives, these books are sure to keep you on your toes â er, paws?Â
Ready to sink your teeth into stories that unsettle and transform, just like âNightbitchâ? Explore Sheridan and Clarkâs recommendations below.
Use the dropdown menu at the upper left to filter the books by genre. Hover or click on the covers to see the bookâs genre and themes, as well as a short review from the booksellers themselves.
Book
Genre
Themes
Review
âAnimalâ by Lisa Taddeo
Literary Fiction
Feminine Rage
âIf youâre looking for something in the literary fiction vein that still explores feminine rage, âAnimalâ by Lisa Taddeo might be the one for you. âAnimalâ is a wild ride of unspeakable horrors, feminine rage, and one womanâs cathartic transformation. The writing is brilliant, and the story is savage.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âApartment Womenâ by Gu Byeong-mo
Literary Fiction
Women, Friendship
âWhen Yojin and her family move into an experimental commune outside Seoul, she commits to having two more children in the next ten years. But the more she learns about her community, the more uneasy she becomes about the place she now calls home. Apartment Women takes an unblinking look at community dynamics around parenting in general, and the expected labor of motherhood in particular.â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âBaby Teethâ by Zoje Stage
Horror
Motherhood, Evil Child
âWant to explore the difficulties of parenting through a more prominent horror lens? Check out âBaby Teethâ by Zoje Stage! Motherhood is already hard, but what if your kid was actually evil? âBaby Teethâ takes all of your motherhood anxieties and cranks them to eleven in this novel that is told in dual point-of-view between Suzette, who loves â and fears â her daughter, and Hanna, the seven year old who might just do whatever it takes to get her mother out of her way.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âMotherhoodâ by Sheila Heti
Literary Fiction
Feminism, Motherhood, Women
âAn incisive and expansive look into the life of a woman who goes on a journey of enlightenment to answer the question of if, not when, will she become a mother? For those who watched âNightbitchâ and wondered if this whole motherhood thing is really a thing they want to do at all.â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âNightbitchâ by Rachel Yoder
Literary Fiction
Motherhood, Feminine Rage, Unreliable Narrator
âI always recommend reading the source material if you have the chance! This novel swung for the fences, playing in the horror and fairy tale spaces while still appealing widely to readers of literary fiction, and it was wildly successful in that. Tapping into parental anxieties, the physical transformation of childbirth, and feminine rage, this book is darkly funny, surreal, and perhaps a bit cathartic.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âSister Snakeâ by Amanda Lee Koe
Literary Fiction
Magical Realism, Feminism, AAPI
âA contemporary retelling of Chinese folktale âThe Legend of the White Snakeâ about two estranged immortal sisters reunited and reckoning with their shared past. This has dark humor, family dynamics, and women transforming into animals â what more could you want?â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âSoldier, Sailorâ by Claire Kilroy
Literary Fiction
Motherhood, Family
âA lyrical unfolding of a new mother Soldierâs early years with her son, Sailor. When she reconnects with a former colleague, she must grapple with just how much she has changed from the person she was before. For those wanting a stark, emotional, raw exploration of the realities of new motherhood.â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âSomeone You Can Build a Nest Inâ by John Wiswell
Fantasy
Humor, Body Horror, LGBTQ+
âShesheshen is a monster. And she is in love. Homily, her girlfriend, is hunting the monster she believes cursed her family, which is, coincidentally, Shesheshen. If she wants her happily ever after, Shesheshen has many challenges to face, like stabby in-laws, motherhood, and the desire to lay eggs inside the love of her life so their children devour her from the inside out. More on the cozy side of fantastical horror, this explores what happens when people in a relationship have different ideas of what love means, and what one should do when oneâs idea of love is all-consuming. Literally. (Cozy! We promise!)â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âSuch Sharp Teethâ by Rachel Harrison
Horror
Werewolves, Pregnancy, Feminine Rage
âIf you want to take the motherhood-canine metaphor of âNightbitchâ a step further, pick up âSuch Sharp Teethâ by one of my favorite Horror authors, Rachel Harrison. Who doesnât love a werewolf book, especially one that compares pregnancy to lycanthropy and finds them terrifyingly similar?! Two sisters: one, a recently turned werewolf. The other, a single pregnant woman. Both experiencing a loss of control, a lack of bodily autonomy, massive life changes, physical and mental transformations, and a whole lot of feminine rage. Such Sharp Teeth is a gruesome and cathartic novel that grasped me in its claws and had me craving the next full moon.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âThe Eyes Are the Best Partâ by Monika Kim
Horror
AAPI, Cannibalism, Psychological Horror
âCollege freshman Ji-wonâs father has walked out, her grades are tanking, her friends arenât talking to her, and her mom has a new â and very unwelcome â boyfriend. When she begins to have increasingly vivid dreams about unsettling and appetizing eyeballs, reality begins to slip away from her. This grapples with family, race, patriarchy, and the insatiable desire to eat your momâs new boyfriendâs eyeballs.â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âThe Lambâ by Lucy Rose
Literary Fiction
Fairytales and Folklore, LGBTQ+, Cannibalism
âMargot and Mama live by the forest. When stray people come across their home, Mama welcomes them, soothes them, and then consumes them. When Eden appears in a snowstorm, Mamaâs hunger becomes something different, and everything changes between Margot and Mama. A creeping folk tale about coming-of-age, female desire, and learning what love truly looks like.â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âThe Night Guestâ by Hildur Knutsdottir
Horror
Possession, Feminine Rage
âIf you want a story about a woman going through something unexplainable, âThe Night Guestâ by Hildur KnĂştsdĂłttir should be added to your list immediately. IĂ°unn finds herself increasingly fatigued and weak, but her doctor dismisses her symptoms and her bloodwork doesnât show anything physically wrong with her. She knows something is wrong, though, especially when she wakes up in the morning having apparently walked 40,000 steps overnight according to her fitness watch. This book has all of the feminine rage and physical transformations that you loved in âNightbitch,â with an added layer of horror.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âThe Redemption of Morgan Brightâ by Chris Panatier
Horror
Unreliable Narrator, Loss of Control, Mental Institution
âIf what you love about âNightbitchâ is trying to decide if the events are really happening or if theyâre all in Motherâs head, allow me to share with you one of my recent favorite novels with an unreliable narrator: âThe Redemption of Morgan Brightâ by Chris Panatier. âThe Redemption of Morgan Brightâ is a writhing psychological thriller with layers upon layers of horror. Welcome to the insidious Hollyhock House, a modern-day asylum where men can have their wives institutionalized for basically any reason. From the disturbing ideas about motherhood and death to the cultish ritualistic behavior, the staff of Hollyhock are a bunch of walking red flags from the jump. Morgan Bright creates a false identity and has herself committed so she can try to solve the mystery surrounding her sisterâs death. What she discovers within the walls of Hollyhock is so much worse, and so much weirder than she could ever have imagined. We, the readers, watch helplessly as her false identity, Charlotte, takes control, forcing Morgan down into a horrifying spiral of madness. Chris Panatier tackles extremely relevant themes with a practiced hand and a supernatural bend. The pages are drenched in paranoia, grief, regret, and terror. âThe Redemption of Morgan Brightâ is a sharp, twisting, bloody nightmare, of which I almost didnât want to wake.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âThe September Houseâ by Carissa Orlando
Horror
Haunted House, Missing Person, Domestic Abuse
âDo you want a book with some comedic horror? A book about women normalizing things that shouldnât be normalized? A book about hiding things from loved ones? Look no further than âThe September Houseâ by Carissa Orlando! Margaret has found her dream home, and itâs absolutely perfect. Okay, sure, every September the walls start bleeding and the ghost children return, but itâs her dream home, and itâs not so bad, really. You see, Margaret has learned the rules, and so long as you follow the rules, everything will be fine⌠(Reader, everything will not be fine). âThe September Houseâ was a blistering journey of emotion that I was wholly unprepared for, and of which I loved every second. Carissa Orlando has taken the haunted house trope, flipped it on its head and given us a brilliantly clever novel about so much more than ghosts.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âThe Woods All Blackâ by Lee Mandelo
Fantasy
Historical, LGBTQ+, Horror
âWhen Leslie Bruin is sent by the Frontier Nursing Service to a small Appalachian town, he knows its inhabitants are likely to see him as nothing but a failed woman. However, the religious fervor and hostility brewing in Spar Creek, the nightmarish beast lurking in its woods, and the feral tomboy living in the townâs margins are far more than he bargained for. This historical horrorâs exploration of self via monstrous transformation makes it a compelling follow-up read to Nightbitch.â â Caroline Sheridan, Side Quest Books and Games
âWhat Kind of Motherâ by Clay McLeod Chapman
Horror
Parenthood, Lost Child, Grief
âEnjoying the twisted looks at parenthood? Want something way, way darker than âNightbitch?â Look no further than âWhat Kind of Motherâ by Clay McLeod Chapman. No one writes parental horror like Clay McLeod Chapman. âWhat Kind of Motherâ is what happens when you drown a Nicholas Sparks novel in a river. Itâs drenched with love, with loss, with the screaming ache of a parentâs worst nightmare, and thenâŚcan it be? A wish granted. But reader, be careful what you wish for. This book lures you in with false hopes and a gentle tide, and then flips your boat and drags you to the bottom of the river where the crabs are waiting to feast. This book is incredibly dark, incredibly weird, and incredibly gorgeous.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
âWitchcraft for Wayward Girlsâ by Grady Hendrix
Horror
Pregnancy, Chosen Family, Witchcraft
âWhen I think of comedic horror, the first name that comes to mind is Grady Hendrix. Heâs the master of scaring the daylights out of you, while making you chuckle at his absurd scenarios and asides. His next novel, âWitchcraft for Wayward Girls,â comes out on Jan. 14, 2025 and is set in a house for unwed mothers in the 1950s, where a group of the girls discover an actual book of witchcraft. Naturally, everything goes swimmingly.â â Ryan Clark, Gibsonâs Bookstore
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