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3.5 

What the Woods Took

By Courtney Gould
What the Woods Took by Courtney Gould digital book - Fable

Publisher Description

A January Indie Next Pick!

“A visceral, unflinching, and emotionally powerful horror novel...this is Gould at her most poignant and most electric.” –Ava Reid, #1 New York Times bestselling author of A Study in Drowning

Yellowjackets meets Girl, Interrupted when a group of troubled teens in a wilderness therapy program find themselves stranded in a forest full of monsters eager to take their place.

Devin Green wakes in the middle of the night to find two men in her bedroom. No stranger to a fight, she calls to her foster parents for help, but it soon becomes clear this is a planned abduction—one everyone but Devin signed up for. She’s shoved in a van and driven deep into the Idaho woods, where she’s dropped off with a cohort of equally confused teens. Finally, two camp counselors inform them that they've all been enrolled in an experimental therapy program. If the campers can learn to change their self-destructive ways—and survive a fifty-days hike through the wilderness—they’ll come out the other side as better versions of themselves. Or so the counselors say.

Devin is immediately determined to escape. She’s also determined to ignore Sheridan, the cruel-mouthed, lavender-haired bully who mocks every group exercise. But there’s something strange about these woods—inhuman faces appearing between the trees, visions of people who shouldn't be there flashing in the leaves—and when the campers wake up to find both counselors missing, therapy becomes the least of their problems. Stranded and left to fend for themselves, the teens quickly realize they’ll have to trust each other if they want to survive. But what lies in the woods may not be as dangerous as what the campers are hiding from each other—and if the monsters have their way, no one will leave the woods alive.

Atmospheric and sharp, What the Woods Took is a poignant story of transformation that explores the price of becoming someone—or something—new.

“Unsettling, raw, and absolutely terrifying. Gould tears open the tender, angry heart of teenage friendship and what happens when our loved ones fail us.” -Trang Thanh Tran, New York Times bestselling author of She is a Haunting

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253 Reviews

3.5
Anxious Face with sweat“i will never go camping again.”
“There’s something about an eerie forest that just gets under your skin—and this book absolutely nailed that creeping, unsettling feeling. This is more than just a survival horror story; it’s a sharp, emotionally resonant tale about identity, transformation, and the ways society fails its most vulnerable. Devin and the other teens are thrown into the woods under the guise of therapy, but what unfolds is something far darker. When their counselors vanish, they’re left alone with their fears, their secrets, and the uncanny presence of something lurking just beyond the trees—something that wants to replace them. At its core, this book is about the messy, painful process of figuring out who you are. For teens on the edge of adulthood—or anyone who remembers that feeling of disorientation—this story hits deep. It explores how kids can slip through the cracks, abandoned by systems meant to help them, and how the pressure to be "fixed" can feel suffocating. The horror is both supernatural and deeply human: the monsters in the woods are terrifying, but so is the idea of losing yourself to become what others expect. And yet, there's hope here too—hope that redemption is possible, that change doesn’t have to mean erasure, and that the right people will accept you as you are. Although slow at times, this would be a fantastic pick for readers new to YA horror, especially those who love isolation horror, survival stories, or unsettling psychological tension. The message? It’s better to be imperfectly you than to mold yourself into someone else’s version of perfect. And to the teens (or former teens) who need to hear this: keep being yourself. The right people will find you.”

About Courtney Gould

COURTNEY GOULD writes books about queer girls, ghosts, and things that go bump in the night. She graduated from Pacific Lutheran University in 2016 with a Bachelor’s degree in Creative Writing and Publishing. She was born and raised in Salem, OR, where she continues to write love letters to the haunted girls and rural, empty spaces. She is the author of The Dead and the Dark and Where Echoes Die.

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