The Woman at No. 3
by Rebecca Collomosse, Olivia Mace, Emma Noakes, Charlotte Worthing
About This Book
A young family moves into their dream home only to find that fresh starts rarely come without cost. Strange occurrences pile up quickly — lights that cut out on a schedule no one set, a child terrified of something in the corner of her room, a neighbor named Josie whose helpfulness curdles into something far more unsettling. The central tension here isn't just whether the house is haunted or the neighbor is dangerous, but whether the protagonist herself can be trusted — and that doubt is what keeps the pages turning.
Collomosse, Mace, Noakes, and Worthing write in the tradition of domestic psychological thrillers where the horror is ordinary and intimate: gifts left uninvited, notes through a door, a smile that stays just a beat too long. The multi-author structure gives the narrative a restless, shifting quality that suits the story's paranoid atmosphere. What sets it apart is how efficiently it weaponizes the everyday — babysitting offers, neighborly kindness, a bottle on a kitchen counter — turning the mundane markers of suburban life into sources of dread. Readers who like their suspense close to home will find it hits exactly where it's meant to.