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Tuesday, December 2, 2025

A Box Full of Darkness by Simone St. James

Siblings return to the house they fled eighteen years before, called back by the ghost of their long-missing brother and his haunting request to come home.

Strange things happen in Fell, New York: A mysterious drowning at the town’s roadside motel. The unexplained death of a young girl whose body is left by the railroad tracks. For Violet, Vail, and Dodie Esmie the final straw was their little brother's shocking disappearance, which started as a normal game of hide-and-seek.

As their parents grew increasingly distant, the sisters were each haunted by visions and frightening events, leading them to leave town and never look back. Violet still sees dead people—spirits who remind her of Sister, the menacing presence that terrorized her for years. Now after nearly two decades it’s time for a homecoming—because Ben is back, and he’s ready to lead them to the answers they’ve longed for and long feared.

Kindle Edition, 344 pages
Expected publication January 20, 2026
by Berkley
3.25/5 stars

Simone St. James has been one of my go-to Canadian authors ever since The Broken Girls, a book I absolutely loved and continue to recommend every chance I get. Her signature blend of mystery and the paranormal has always worked for me, so I was eager to dive into this her latest, A Box Full of Darkness, which releases next month.

This story follows three adult siblings who return to their childhood home 18 years after the disappearance of their six-year-old brother, Ben. It happened on a snowy winter day during a simple game of hide-and-seek… and then he is just gone. No footprints in the snow, no signs he left the property, nothing. That impossible mystery has haunted them ever since and their return home forces them to confront the truth about what really happened.

St. James leans even more heavily into the paranormal here, weaving an atmosphere that’s moody, eerie, and full of tension. While I enjoyed the setup and her trademark supernatural flare the story didn’t grip me quite as tightly as some of her earlier novels. And I have to admit, the ending did left me with a number of unanswered questions, more than I usually expect from her work.

Still, the central mystery of what happened to little Ben kept me turning the pages. A solid, atmospheric read with that classic Simone St. James chill, even if it isn't my personal favourite. I’ll always be excited for whatever she writes next.

Big thanks to Berkley Publishing (via Netgalley) for a digital arc in exchange for a honest review.

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