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The dead don’t stay buried in Lindy Ryan’s Southern horror series

Monique Snyman, BookTrib.com on

Published in Mom's Advice

With "Another Fine Mess" upon us, now is the perfect time to revisit Lindy Ryan’s chilling Southern horror series. If you haven’t yet stepped into the eerie world of the Evans family, you’re in for a fun, unputdownable experience. These novels are more than ghost stories — they’re a reckoning with history, grief and the ties that refuse to break.

Lindy Ryan’s "Bless Your Heart" pulls you deep into the uneasy heart of small-town Texas, where the dead won’t stay buried, and family is as much a burden as a bond. At the center are the Evans women — Lenore, Ducey and Grace — who run the local funeral parlor and understand better than most that death is rarely the end.

The novel opens with a disturbing encounter: Edwin Boone, a war veteran, finds himself face-to-face with an old friend, one who should be long dead. His death sets off a chain of unsettling events, culminating in the funeral of Mina Jean Murphy, a seemingly ordinary event that quickly spirals into something far more sinister. Snow Leger, the town’s beautician for the dead, witnesses firsthand how the boundary between the living and the departed is beginning to fray. Soon, disappearances, mutilated bodies and ghostly whispers unravel any illusion of normalcy.

But "Bless Your Heart" isn’t just about the horrors lurking in the shadows; it’s about the weight of family legacy. Lenore struggles under the burden of the funeral business and the supernatural inheritance she never wanted. Ducey treats the dead with the same no-nonsense attitude she applies to life, while Grace, caught between generations, is forced to reckon with the creeping dread closing in on them. And then there’s Luna, Grace’s daughter, who finds herself pulled into the chaos in ways no child should be.

Ryan crafts an atmosphere thick with tension, where the oppressive heat of the setting amplifies the slow-building dread. There are no cheap scares here, just a lingering unease that seeps into your bones. With its evocative storytelling and richly drawn characters, "Bless Your Heart" sets the stage for what comes next …

Another Fine Mess

If "Bless Your Heart" is the warning, "Another Fine Mess" is the reckoning. Ryan takes us deeper into a town where secrets fester, and the past is as dangerous as any ghost.

 

The story begins with Priscilla “Pie” Evans celebrating her 93rd birthday with vanilla wafers and banana pudding before heading out to dig a grave. It’s a moment that immediately sets the tone. For the Evans family, death isn’t an abstract concept; it’s woven into their existence. Pie’s daughter, Lenore, and granddaughter, Luna, don’t just inherit the funeral parlor; they inherit its secrets. And when bodies start turning up and rumors of a ghost wolf spread, ignoring their legacy is no longer an option.

As the Evans women navigate their eerie inheritance, the town teeters on the edge of something darker. Undersheriff Roger Taylor, drawn into the family’s orbit by his concern for Luna, finds himself facing the unexplainable. Corinne Bennick, a professor obsessed with wolves, arrives with theories that only deepen the mystery. Then comes the Homecoming Dance, a moment meant for celebration that erupts into a blood-soaked nightmare.

At the heart of it all is Luna, who is forced to confront her mother’s monstrous transformation and make an impossible choice. The novel’s climax isn’t just a battle against supernatural forces; it’s an acceptance of the inevitable — of history, loss and the inescapable pull of the past.

Ryan’s prose immerses you into the story, and "Another Fine Mess" doesn’t merely rely on sudden shocks to keep readers turning the pages. Instead, the story builds with a creeping sense of horror that lingers long after the final page.

With "Bless Your Heart" and "Another Fine Mess," Lindy Ryan delivers an unsettling, deeply human tale of legacy and loss. If you haven’t stepped into this world yet, now’s the time. Because "Another Fine Mess" is coming, and it’s bringing the ghosts with it.


 

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