By: Leah
Top Ten Tuesday used to be a weekly post hosted by The Broke and the Bookish, but was moved to That Artsy Reader Girl. “It was born of a love of lists, a love of books, and a desire to bring bookish friends together.” This is definitely something I can understand and want to participate in.
Originally posted on Leah’s Books.
This week’s prompt is atmospheric books, and this is another buzzy word I see used all the time. The Novelry explains this concept as: “A novel feels atmospheric when the setting and the narrative are deeply involved with one another; when characters and plot are physically embedded in their surroundings, and a near-tangible mood lifts from the pages and wraps itself around the reader.” Study.com explains that, “The atmosphere is how a writer constructs their piece to convey feelings, emotions, and mood to the reader. The atmosphere in literature might be tense, fast-paced, mysterious, spooky, whimsical, or joyful and can be found in poetry, stories, novels, and series.”
I’m a huge fan of atmospheric novels, the kind that pull a reader in and make us feel like we are actually in the story, where the setting and the characters and the story itself all directly interact, although the ones that I wind up reading tend to be on the darker side. Here’s ten of my favorite atmospheric reads:










- One Dark Window by Rachel Gillig. When I think of atmospheric reads, this book is the very first that comes to mind. With a deadly mist, people trying to find a way to fix the curse on their town, a magical deck of cards, and a romance subplot, this book is the epitome of atmospheric.
- Velvet Was the Night by Silvia Moreno-Garcia. I got an ARC of this through NetGalley, and when I read it, there was a Spotify playlist that Moreno-Garcia herself put out. Listening to it while reading was a unique experience that allowed me to feel even more immersed in this noir story.
- Ninth House by Leigh Bardugo. An Ivy League college, secret societies, ghosts, a murder, and a story that progresses from autumn through winter had me feeling like I needed a hot cup of tea and a blanket to keep reading.
- The Luminaries by Susan Dennard. A town surrounded by a forest full of dangerous monsters, and wolf shifters that protect it, with a story told by a girl whose family is shunned by the entire town all made for a very atmospheric book.
- The Tyranny of Faith by Richard Swan. This one was a dark read, and it was one of my favorites of the year. There was something about it that just had me feeling as though I was traveling with the characters.
- Demon Copperhead by Barbara Kingsolver. A modern day retelling of David Copperfield set in West Virginia, I could feel the poverty and struggle of the characters, and experience their pain and joys right along with them.
- The Will of the Many by James Islington. This book perfectly fits the definition of atmospheric as listed above, and it conveys a tense and mysterious tone that I had so much trouble putting down.
- City Under One Roof by Iris Yamashita. One of the most tense books that I’ve ever read, this entire story takes place within a single building, designed to house everything the residents could need for an entire winter in remote Alaska. It’s the ultimate atmospheric, locked-door mystery.
- The Villa by Rachel Hawkins. Two friends who have drifted apart decide to spend the summer at a villa notorious for inspiring some incredible works of literature and music in the past, as well as a murder in the 1970s, but as these friends begin looking into the villa’s history, things get darker.
- Our Crooked Hearts by Melissa Albert. This story about magic, secrets, and family was anything but what I expected, and while reading, I felt like anything was possible.

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