A Vow for Breaking

feverish folk horror for fans of 'Juniper and Thorn', 'The Bog Wife', or ‘Alice In Wonderland’

By: L.M. Riviere

Burnt Leaf Press is thrilled to announce the release of ‘A Vow For Breaking,’ a forbidding, standalone novel steeped in Appalachian lore, inherited curses, and a backwoods mansion brimming with otherworldly terror.

Set in the Blue Ridge Mountains of North Carolina, this dark fairy tale follows Sloane McIntyre, a Boston-born workhouse girl and suspected murderess, who is sent away to serve a rich man and his ailing wife. But what begins as a promising new start curdles into something far more sinister. Sloane soon finds herself drawn into a labyrinth of horrors only a demon could survive.

Gothic, eerie, and emotionally sharp, A Vow for Breaking will appeal to readers of Appalachian folk horror, historical gothic fiction, and haunting fables where nothing is as it seems … and almost everything is hungry.

With lyrical menace and atmospheric depth, author L.M. Riviere delivers a chilling story of suspicion, confinement, and the monstrous things we keep locked inside.

for fans of gothic fiction, appalachian folk horror, and dark fairy tales

  • Appalachian setting

  • A protagonist with a dangerous secret

  • Slow-burn tension and dread

  • Mansion in the woods

  • An ancient evil

Black silhouette of an occult-like beast with strange horns.
  • If you loved Juniper & Thorn → you may want A Vow for Breaking (gothic horror + dark fairy tale)

  • If you loved Pan’s Labyrinth → you may want A Vow for Breaking (dark fairy tale mood, hunger, dread)

  • If you loved T. Kingfisher (The Twisted Ones) → you may want A Vow for Breaking (rural dread, uncanny)

  • If you loved Revelator (Daryl Gregory) → you may want A Vow for Breaking (mountain gothic horror)

  • If you loved The Boatman’s Daughter (Andy Davidson) → you may want A Vow for Breaking (Southern folk-horror fable energy)

Comparisons are for reader reference only; no affiliation or endorsement is implied.

Frequently Asked Questions

Comparisons are for reader reference only; no affiliation or endorsement is implied.

Prefer a historical dark fairy tale instead? Start with A Dark Most Fair.