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#thighgap

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Mother Horror presents: Los Angeles fashion model Helen Troy wasn’t always skinny. Drastic weight loss has given her everything–money, confidence, attention, respect. Being thin has legitimized her, and starvation has become an addiction. Following an encounter with a seemingly “perfect” rival model who destabilizes Helen’s shaky self-confidence and shatters her fragile illusion of control, she’s sent into a tragic tailspin that will take her to the lowest depths of hell. Nightmarish versions of herself begin materializing in mirrors, and her tried-and-true coping mechanisms stop working. Reality comes apart at the seams as Helen’s disease manifests in increasingly self-destructive fashions, forcing her to ask herself… What does perfection look like, and how much would you sacrifice to obtain it? Don’t read with the lights on…this is My Dark Library. A collection of novellas curated by Sadie “Mother Horror” Hartmann to represent her favorite themes, tropes, and subgenres in horror fiction today. “No blurb will be able to fully convey how great this book is. Chandler Morrison’s voice is unique, stylish and powerful. Required reading for fans of Brett Easton Ellis, Tom Piccirilli or Chuck Palahniuk.” – Brian Keene , Author of Ghoul “ #thighgap is a story of abyssal redemption. A frozen palace of beautiful and broken people. It’s brutal and tragically sexy and doesn’t shy away from any of its dark interiors.” – Autumn Christian , Author of Girl Like a Bomb

120 pages, Paperback

First published August 30, 2022

About the author

Chandler Morrison

16 books570 followers
Little is known about Chandler’s origins. He has claimed, on separate occasions, to be both from Helltown, California, and Cleveland, Ohio. To date, it is still unclear from which locale he actually hails. He currently resides in Los Angeles, but sightings of him are rare.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 288 reviews
Profile Image for Debbie Y.
43 reviews450 followers
April 18, 2023
⛧⛧⛧⛧


"𝙊𝙣𝙚 𝙣𝙚𝙚𝙙 𝙣𝙤𝙩 𝙗𝙚 𝙖 𝙘𝙝𝙖𝙢𝙗𝙚𝙧 𝙩𝙤 𝙗𝙚 𝙝𝙖𝙪𝙣𝙩𝙚𝙙, 𝙤𝙣𝙚 𝙣𝙚𝙚𝙙 𝙣𝙤𝙩 𝙗𝙚 𝙖 𝙝𝙤𝙪𝙨𝙚. 𝙏𝙝𝙚 𝙗𝙧𝙖𝙞𝙣 𝙝𝙖𝙨 𝙘𝙤𝙧𝙧𝙞𝙙𝙤𝙧𝙨 𝙨𝙪𝙧𝙥𝙖𝙨𝙨𝙞𝙣𝙜 𝙢𝙖𝙩𝙚𝙧𝙞𝙖𝙡 𝙥𝙡𝙖𝙘𝙚." ~ 𝙀𝙢𝙞𝙡𝙮 𝘿𝙞𝙘𝙠𝙞𝙣𝙨𝙤𝙣. 



I'm sitting on the balcony. It's an early Saturday morning, and it feels like the rest of the world is still asleep, although the sun is already up in the sky. I'll be honest with you, I'm more of a rainy day kind of person. The balcony bathes in the sunlight, and i close my eyes. The darkness I desire is nowhere to be found, so I go inside the house to search for it. At first, it refuses to manifest itself, but then, for a brief moment, I see it, a glimpse of darkness coming from a book shelf. How did i miss this? It has been there all along, a portal to the darkness i desire. I pick it up, and it devours me. 

#𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐠𝐡𝐠𝐚𝐩


This book swallowed me whole. Reading it felt like a suffocation of the senses, or was it a senseless suffocation? Probably both. 
Chandler Morrison's enchanting writing provides a deep, raw look into the dark terrors that roil in the benighted depths of the mind of one who deals with eating disorders and body dysmorphia.


Allow me to introduce you to Helen Troy. She is the architect of her own catastrophe. She is also a beautiful LA-based fashion model. Helen's inner dialogue is a raw portrait of a haunted mind. In her pursuit of what she considers to be perfection, Helen becomes obsessed with her weight and society's validation. Haunted by the demons of her mind, she starves herself. This is not just a starvation of the body but also of the soul. 


Some aspects of  #𝐓𝐡𝐢𝐠𝐡𝐠𝐚𝐩 reflect us as a society: Is it the envelope that we choose to judge others by? Do we need others' approval to be able to feel whole? To what length will we go to be accepted by others' standards? And why? 


Over the years, I have reached the conclusion that freedom lies in going beyond all identification. 


I would suggest threading very carefully through the thorny bushes of this powerful book. It is a cold, dark neighborhood you are about to step into, so choose a warm outfit, and don't bother with couture.
Profile Image for Sadie Hartmann.
Author 22 books6,233 followers
August 30, 2022
Available now from My Dark Library in partnership with Cemetery Gates Media
https://cemeterygatesmedia.com/2022/0...
Also on Kindle Unlimited
A snippet from my foreword:
"#thighgap gave me so much to think about. So much to process as I went on this dark journey with the protagonist, Helen Troy. Through her experiences, readers see Helen the way she sees herself. We see the way she sees others. The way she is treated by strangers, her peers, her co-workers, her therapist, her love interests, friends, and ultimately the weight of everyone’s perceptions and expectations.

It’s absolutely staggering and an extremely important point of view. I commend Chandler for his bravery and the intuition that was necessary, to tell the truth of this story. I hope it has the same effect on all of you as it had on me."

Profile Image for inciminci.
518 reviews215 followers
July 23, 2023
In some way, it is inherent to horror to be extreme. Take for example any situation or state, even something positive like happiness or a relationship, and drive it to the extreme, make too much of it, make it excessive and cross a certain limit, and it will, in my opinion, end up being horror. The bigger the contrast between the starting point and the end, the more interesting to me.
But take a thing which isn’t associated with positivity at all, like an eating disorder, a situation strongly related to the feelings of wanting to disappear or losing control of one’s life, manifesting itself in an excessive control over the body, a nightmare situation for some, and drive that further and you have hell. #thighgap is hellish in that sense.

I want to be nothing but bone. I want to disappear.

The life of former aspiring filmmaker Louanne, now skinny model Helene Troy in LA is, of course, a very dark and sharpened version of where an eating disorder can lead if left to blossom in an environment which endorses and encourages it - biting critique of that very environment that is LA of course included.

The extremeness which marks the plot in #thighgap doesn’t spare its characters: there’s really not one remotely likable character in this book, except maybe the uber driver. From her extremely superficial crush, to the film director she casually hooks up with, to her therapist - every single male character actively contributes to Helen sinking deeper and deeper into the fangs of anorexia. Helen herself acts out of a need for a sense of superiority, even though we’re shown where that comes from, our compassion for her is limited.

But anyway, this was great, I can't remember the last time I finished a book in one day and even wrote its review within the same day. Looking at the author’s page I see influences like Brett Easton Ellis or Chuck Palahniuk and I definitely see that.

Favorite quote – “I can’t tell if he’s hitting on me, or if he’s just gay.” – lol, so Berlin!
Profile Image for Peter.
3,384 reviews605 followers
September 6, 2022
Helen Troy is a superthin model. Beauty and being that skinny means everything to her. She's fighting her alter ego, the fat slug she thought to have conquered. Her life is superficial and vain. Will she find a way out of her self destructive habit full of cocaine, vomiting, casual sex and playing the glamorous girl? Well, don't know if this is horror (in a certain way, yes) but it definitely is a blunt look backstage the world of supermodels and their circles. Do you like the main character? No, but you'll definitely want to find out how the story ends. Well written in a merciless prose. Hard stuff as the author describes Helen's narcissistic world in a very convincing way. Not for the faint hearted. Really recommended.
Profile Image for Janie.
1,138 reviews
January 16, 2023
Helen Troy is a model. In her mind's eye, being as thin as possible is the highest attainable goal. Being the thinnest of all the girls is equated with the highest beauty. Helen just doesn't know where to draw the line. Not literally. Our girl is an expert when it comes to drugs. Dread and fear are major players in this novella. As Helen dances blindly with Corpse Girl, the word "ethereal" takes on an entirely different meaning. Something important to ask yourself: do you have the #thigh gap? Don't lose yourself in it.
Profile Image for KillerBunny.
223 reviews116 followers
March 28, 2023
Chandler Morrison writing is something else. You can almost feel the darkness surrounding you while reading his books.

Anorexia and body image is a big triggers for tons of women around the world. Me included. This book was written with a master-hand, seeing inside the main character head give us the opportunity to realize how being a flawless creature doesn't always mean interior beauty too. is beauty really worth it? Where is the line? When appearance is everything, should you put your life on the line for it.

I still don't know how to feel after this book, yes it was a masterpiece, but for sure I'm going to continue thinking about it for a long time.
Profile Image for Kelly| Just Another Horror Reader .
467 reviews327 followers
June 15, 2022
I finished this last night and I can’t stop thinking about it. It’s a hard book for me to review. It made me sad, it made me mad, it made me cringe. This book REALLY got to me. ‘Morrison’s books always hit me hard but this one knocked me on my ass.

It’s told through the eyes of a woman named Helen Troy who is a Hollywood model. Her vision of what beauty is is extremely twisted and she develops a severe eating disorder. She takes multiple drugs to keep from feeling hungry. I kinda hated Holly but I did feel sorry for her too. Her love interest ( if I can even call him that) Jasper is a totally self absorbed douche bag. All the secondary characters were very unlikable.

So that, on the surface, is what the book is about. If you dig deeper, it’s about loneliness, consumerism and a social commentary on what our society has become. It’s not a pretty picture to say the least.

What really makes this story so special is the gorgeous writing:

“My hunger becomes a halo. It gives me wings which carry me above the mortals so dependent on their sickening sustenance. I can look down on them, a god, reproachful of the humans’ inability to control their cravings. I am a pure, perfect being. Untouched, untouchable. I exist on another plane.”

No one writes like Chandler Morrison. He’s a writer at the top of his game and I highly recommend this one.

Thank you Sadie Hartmann and Cemetery Gates Media for my review copy. Release date is 8/30/22.
Profile Image for renee w.
215 reviews
September 3, 2022
Wow! Wow! Wow! I’m completely blown away by this book. I have now read over 200 books this year and this has moved itself into my top 3. This book is about body dysmorphia and a hard reminder of the society we live in .
Profile Image for Renée.
224 reviews3 followers
August 31, 2022
OMG. WOW.
Powerful, beautiful, haunting and heartbreaking. CM’s writing is nothing short of phenomenal and I believe this is his best work yet. Now I need to go and lie down.
Profile Image for Janelle Janson.
719 reviews478 followers
August 16, 2022
As you can see from the title, it’s body dysmorphic content within a horror novella - consider yourself warned.

#THIGHGAP is part of the My Dark Library curated by the lovely Sadie Hartmann for Cemetery Gates. (thank you for my review copy)

Helen Troy is a model in Los Angeles, but she wasn’t always this way. She recently reinvented herself, killing her old self and now feels more alive than ever. But what you’ll read are the darkest thoughts of body dysmorphia, low self-esteem, and cruel acquaintances.

I don’t know what it is about Chandler Morrison, but I love his style. He kind of reminds me of Bret Easton Ellis, but with his own flair. His characters do the most sad and depraved things, but you always want to know what happens to them. His books are messed up, but there is no gratuity - every word is precise and has a purpose. His words are sharp, clever, and sometimes funny - a deadpan sense of humor that I enjoy. However, there is nothing funny about this particular story. Helen is not wicked or depraved. She’s not exactly likable either, but she’s all too real. Even though I am nothing like Helen, I found some of her thoughts of self-loathing relatable. Morrison has a talent for descriptive language, and although you may not enjoy (as I did) reading the descriptions, you’ll appreciate how well he draws you into the story. His character voices are loud in my head and the scenes are vivid - watch out for that.
Profile Image for Karla Kay.
394 reviews68 followers
September 5, 2022
“Once he’s gone, I return to my mirror. It is my altar. My cheekbones, my xylophone ribs, my flat stomach, my thigh gap–these are my sacraments.”

How do you perceive the people around you? Your friends, your co-workers, a stranger passing by? Do you see the person as a soul or just an image by size and appearance?

In Chandler’s #thighgap we are introduced to Helen Troy and join her on her miserable journey through the darkness of suffering.

She suffers from body dysmorphia, drug addiction, addiction to laxatives, binging and starvation which leads her to severe bulimia and anorexia. She is also addicted to how others perceive her and needs their constant attention and praise.

Her descent into this life began at a young age of being shamed for what the world perceives as being overweight. Her poor self image follows her into adulthood and has caused her to become a ghost in a world of needing to be thin and beautiful, desired and accepted. But it is an empty life filled with deception and shallow people who only see her as a toy to be played with. It does not matter that she is now thin, she is still being shamed and she slowly descends even further into a darkness there is no turning back from.

There is much to ponder upon while taking in all the themes that are laid open with utter rawness and deep, if not a bit ugly imagery. How could it be displayed any other way? This is not a pretty story. It is a life filled with a feeling of no hope. A descent into one's own insanity created by the world one is surrounded by and by one's own severe struggles with self acceptance and a repulsive self image. It is the cruelty of a world filled with offensive humans. A world of materialism, self-absorption, and cultural, political, and economic issues in society.

“He laughs. A sound like old, dead music on a broken record player. “Shame is the name of the game, summer child. You don’t need me to give it to you, either. You’ve got plenty of it all on your own.”

A very poignant and important topic written with raw truth. It has moved me to heartfelt tears and raw emotions and there is no denying that this story is intensely heartbreaking.

A huge thank you to Cemetery Gates Media for sending me a complimentary copy!
Profile Image for destiny ♡ howling libraries.
1,857 reviews6,066 followers
July 16, 2022
You never realize how fragile you are until you're already in pieces.

Before I give my thoughts on #thighgap, I feel obligated to tell you that it's likely to be an upsetting read for a lot of readers. Not only does the book detail some gruesome side effects of severely disordered eating (our narrator Helen is very pro-ED), but it also includes a tremendous amount of body-shaming. Nearly everyone Helen meets is deemed too fat, too old, too lazy, and/or too ugly in her eyes, and her perspective on beauty and class is downright nauseating to read at times.

Helen and nearly everyone around her are horribly unlikeable, especially the men she spends the majority of her time with. While the elements of Helen's ED and the things she begins to witness are unsettling all on their own, the parts of this book that actually disturbed me the most were how disgusting some of the men were, whether it was making pedophilic comments or discouraging Helen from seeking treatment because they worried she would gain weight.

Of course, the terrible nature of these characters is a massive part of the appeal in this story: it's like a train wreck you can't quite look away from, even though every page is turning your stomach a little more sour. I had to see what would happen next, what choices Helen would make, and where we were heading with her visions — especially the corpse girl, whose descriptions were genuinely my favorite part of the entire book.

As for the downsides, the dialogue was a little off-putting for me. Helen and multiple other characters constantly pause mid-sentence, complete with ellipses, and it kept pulling me out of the moment. Things also began to feel a little bit repetitive at times, especially with the name-dropping of luxury brands — but I'm someone who's very out of touch with designers and didn't recognize half of the names mentioned, so I don't think they'll bother plenty of other readers who might be more in-tune with the world of fashion.

With these minor negatives aside, I'm still very excited to have finally experienced Chandler Morrison's writing after hearing so many of my friends rave about his work for years, and I'll be back for more, no doubt.

All quotes come from an advance copy and may not match the final release. Thank you to the publisher & Sadie Hartmann for the review copy! All thoughts are honest and my own.

Content warnings for:

———
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Profile Image for Jason Nickey.
Author 50 books132 followers
November 20, 2022
A disturbing and deep look into eating disorders, self perception, and vanity. You can almost feel yourself descending into delusion with the narrator. Quite a haunting book.
Profile Image for Andrew✌️.
297 reviews22 followers
July 27, 2023
I don't remember exactly how it all started. I saw a comment about the book, intriguing references to the story and decided to read it. It’s a horror story, for the atmosphere and some elements, but which is intertwined with the always worrying phenomenon of anorexia.

Helen Troy is a successful model, a woman who has made beauty and the perfect physique a reason for living, an essential condition for being able to live happily. Her seemingly perfect life is the result of rigor and sacrifices, planned fasting and a delicate balance that will be put to the test during the story. This balance is precarious, poised between a past she's trying to escape from and a future that could be even worse. She works in an environment where image is everything, surrounded by like-minded people, evenings spent partying with friends and strangers, casual sex and drugs. Yet, she is fundamentally alone and this facilitates her downfall, her slow deterioration towards ever heavier starvation, towards what she sees as perfection.

The world in which Helen moves is made up of people who have her own adoration for thinness, yet it is an empty world, in which there are no real ties, everything is fleeting, leaving her always alone in the end and in this way facilitating the worsening of the situation. Her inner dialogues are a mirror of the change that takes place in her, page after page.

It’s impressive a scene in which she finds herself wandering the streets in a car, described in a masterly way:

There’s something like four million people in the city of Los Angeles but I never know where they are. It seems so vacant most of the time. No one is ever around when I need them. I want to believe I don’t need them, that I’m entirely self-sufficient, but there are times when the city becomes so soul-crushingly lonely that I want to scream so someone will hear me. Times like these make me yearn for the claustrophobic anxiety of the parties I never want to go to, or even for the company of the other models who’d all see me dead if they had their way. At least our goals point in the same vague direction.

So far, I hadn't read anything by Chandler Morrison, but I appreciated his style, the frank brutality of his descriptions and the anguish he manages to convey in the story.

A curiosity: most of the characters are always described wearing sunglasses as if to hide any clue about their emotions (even Helen’s therapist, during their sessions).
Profile Image for Billie Tyrell.
157 reviews35 followers
December 3, 2023
Was drawn to this by the punky front cover and then reviews where it says it dealt with issues like body dysmorphia, didn't realise it was meant to be a horror story as was more connecting with the subject matter and overall aesthetic. Surprised by how quickly I poured through it, was very engaged with the narrator who really propelled me into her neurosis, absolutely compelling and emotionally and viscerally nauseating. Honestly worth picking up and good weekend read for anyone who has ever felt fucked up about their body image.
Profile Image for Christina Pfeiffer.
365 reviews32 followers
August 23, 2022
**REVIEW**

Most of us know Chandler Morrison for DEAD INSIDE (the abortion clinic scene) or for non-sparkling vampires in UNTIL THE SUN, even Ty, the Q-Tip feeder in ALONG THE PATH OF TORMENT. But in #thighgap, we see something different, we read about the horrors of real life for so many men and women.

Helen Troy is beauty in every way (but personality). She has the perfect career, the plastic, vapid life and friends in LA, and a very healthy shopping habit (I counted 29 mentions of expensive sunglasses). But what she can’t quite find the perfect balance of is her haunted past.

Morrison delves into mental health (dealing with it and the lack of resources and urgency) and eating disorders (did you know there was an eating disorder side of Twitter? Don’t go to it, it’s toxic and probably some of the most disturbing things I have ever read.)

Other themes in the novella: societal expectations, toxic relationships/friendships, and our own internal struggle at happiness.

We also get to see some previously read characters including one of my most hated characters and one of my favorites. It wouldn’t be a Morrison story without some world weaving (and a Hawthorne Heights reference).

Favorite quote: “Her body was the knife, her age the salt.”

Available now in paperback. August 30th for ebook. If you are a Morrison fangirl like I am, you need to read this one ASAP. I will go on record saying this is his best to date. (And #4 on my Top Ten of 2022).
Profile Image for Rachel the Page-Turner.
503 reviews5 followers
October 15, 2022
I put this one on my TBR list over the summer, then totally forgot about it until I put Chandler Morrison’s “Dead Inside” on my Bookstagram Halloween Horror Countdown (you’d all better be following me there, link in bio!) and was reminded that this one was out now. I immediately ordered it, immediately opened it when I got it, then immediately devoured it.

I’m left with so many feelings…this is a book that dips into reality as easily as it does fantasy. Is it a horror novella? It is. It’s also a surrealistic drama and a biography of a young woman consumed (ha, ha) by the demons in her mind. Helen Troy believes that there is no such thing as being too rich or too thin, but the heavier person she used to be is still inside of her. That part has to die, and the weapons of choice are drug abuse and disordered eating.

This was, of course, sad - especially if you’ve dealt with or known someone with an eating disorder. This was darkly humorous in places. This was thoughtful, contemporary and a subject that needs to be in more genres, written in many different ways. I don’t think I’d change anything, so this one gets the full five and my recommendation as a different type of horror novella.
Profile Image for Sarah Huntington.
Author 28 books83 followers
January 15, 2023
It's very difficult, within the writing community, to leave an honest rate without becoming a pariah or getting a one star rate on your own books in return. Immature revenge rates, it's happened to me before, and it's like high school, but worse. Still, I don't care about any of that, speaking my own personal truth is more important.
I hated this book. I took a few days to make sure my perception wasn't warped by my own history, and I've decided that I have the right to say what I feel regardless. Body Dysmorphia and eating disorders are both very important subjects that perhaps do need to be tackled more in literature. However, it shouldn't be done like this in my opinion. The main character was vapid, a disgusting human being. Arrogant and narcissistic at best and graced with a stupid name. She had no redeeming qualities at all. Usually, I can find empathy for anyone, but not her.
What I despised the most though, was the portrayal of such a serious mental health issue done so very poorly. I'm writing as a nurse, and an ex psychiatric nurse too, one who has seen plenty of people in turmoil with both illnesses. The loss of weight does not and never will equal beautiful. I understand the character is delusional, I get that, still, it doesn't work for me. If there was an underlying message here, I missed it. Maybe I've seen too much real horror in life, who knows.
Controversy for controversies sake doesn't always work.
Of course, this is just my opinion and I always say that opinions are not facts. Horror is subjective and depends on a person's perception, experiences etc.
Other readers already have and will still see the good in this book.
On the bright side, the cover is eye catching and the other books in the Dark Library collection were brilliant. I should add too, that I did like the style of the authors writing and this read hasn't put me off buying and reading more from them in the future.
Profile Image for Kiera ☠.
213 reviews82 followers
November 19, 2023
This was phenomenal. As someone who’s struggled with an eating disorder with fasting and extremely limited calorie deficits Chandler really nailed this. Be warned though, if you’ve struggled with EDs this will be very triggering for you. That being said, this was brilliant. Helen’s complete and total decent into her disorder is all consuming as the reader.

The ‘slug’ version of her and the corpse following her everywhere she goes. Constantly haunted by her fear of gaining weight and encouraged by her untimely demise. This was dark, melancholy, traumatizing and horrifying. On the quest for beauty and perfection, how far will you go? How much will you sacrifice?
Profile Image for Greg B.
155 reviews30 followers
September 7, 2022
Is it weird that this book made me want to lose a ton of weight?
Profile Image for Melanie Bouthillette.
128 reviews11 followers
January 20, 2023
What a sad story. Morrison outdid himself in portraying the struggles of body dysmorphia and acceptance in today's society. It may be a fictional story about a girl and her struggles with anorexia, but it also paints a true and current picture of how social media and advertisements have influenced and changed the way we perceive beauty, status, and popularity in ourselves and others. How far are people willing to take things today just to be accepted by our pier or gain popularity. This book speaks volumes to me. #thighgap is definitely one to read. Five star!!!
Profile Image for Diane .
237 reviews6 followers
June 4, 2023
Heart breaking💔
Gut wrenching 😩
Soul destroying 😱
Mind blowingly sad 😭
I can't say anything else 🤐
Profile Image for Stay Fetters.
2,258 reviews158 followers
May 5, 2023
"You never realize how fragile you are until you're already in pieces."

This is what true horror is. It starts from the inside, slowly crawls out, and haunts your every waking moment.
Profile Image for Tara Losacano.
Author 12 books81 followers
September 1, 2022
Chandler Morrison has a way of writing the most disturbing things in a beautiful way. His prose is always impressive. The theme in this read is dark and all too real. A quote made by one of Helens angels really stuck out to me, it was "I hate the sound of my footsteps. They indicate my presence in the world. I want to be a thing without mass, devoid of matter, drained of all substance. I want to become nothing." 'Such poetry. Such beauty.' 5/5 corpse girl skulls 💀
Profile Image for Alex | | findingmontauk1.
1,488 reviews92 followers
June 5, 2022
#thighgap by Chandler Morrison is difficult to review. It's almost like no matter what is said or left out will both come back to haunt me. It's horrifying and bleak but also outrageous and shocking. If you've read Morrison before then you know there is nothing held back. Content Warnings palooza (you can basically pick any and every single one imaginable from the title/plot summary and it's in this story). But even in the most shocking moments and revelations from our main character, Helen, I do not think anything here is being glorified. It feels deeply personal, raw, and human. It's sick and scary. And it's sad. There are so many emotions packed into this 120 page novella. There's so much heart and pain.

And all these characters just pissed me off - they are so unhelpful (almost the opposite) of anything Helen is going through or thinking. They are all enablers. They are all vapid. And all of this just fuels Helen further and further down the drain. I hope I was not meant to like them or find any of them charming -- because I definitely did not!

There were certain scenes that unsettled me so much I had to pause reading. The things Helen thinks to herself and thinks she sees, hears, smells, etc had me uneasy a lot of the times. There are a lot of relatable emotions and fears. And Morrison just puts it all out there in a way that I feverishly turned the pages because I had to know what was real, what was happening, and if Helen was going to make it out of this journey alive or further unscathed.

I could not put this down, and it almost hurts to like this. But isn't that life? This might be my favorite story Chandler Morrison has written.

And Anna Wintour would be so proud of all the ultra high fashion and luxury brand dropping. From suits to sunglasses, I felt like I had my own tour down Rodeo Drive without the crippling debt.
Profile Image for Horror Bookworm Reviews.
475 reviews167 followers
August 28, 2022
Horror Bookworm Reviews
#thighgap by Chandler Morrison
https://horrorbookwormreviews.com/

Lovely cheekbones, flat stomach and a complexion to die for…Helen Troy is fixated on self image obsession. However as beauty and glamour comes with a surrealistic price, Helen begins a downward spiral of depressive destruction. A haunting reality awaits for those who seek perfection beyond extreme.

Vicodin, Xanax and OxyContin are some familiar components for validating sacraments of self image. Sick souls and morbid minds discover hallow demons while walking a path of nauseating lifestyles. #thighgap by Chandler Morrison exposes these nightmarish illusions of vanity in this modern poetry of the macabre. Cemetery Gates Media has released a disturbing tale of inner torment…a type of horror that more people have in common with than you might think.

Morrison has a distinct talent of exposing invisible barriers of disturbing emotional scars within his writing skills. The visual depictions of warped beauty and guttural horror are perfection taken to the next imaginary level. I’m always impressed how Morrison can introduce his characters while simultaneously shaping a peculiar storyline into a diseased transformation of unwellness.

From protruding vertebrae to sunken ribcage, prepare yourself for the seedy side of horror as hosted by the one and only Chandler Morrison. He is definitely in a class by himself. Not only will you look at yourself in a different manner of self-judgment, you will learn to fear and hate the mirror you gaze in. A five star ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ Horror Bookworm Recommendation.
Profile Image for Escapereality4now.
533 reviews47 followers
August 13, 2022
“Thigh Gap”, by Chandler Morrison, is a terrifying novella about eating disorders and body dysmorphia
This story is a great example of how a horror book does not have to be gory or scary to be part of the genre.

“Thigh Gap” is a first-hand account of the life of a model. The perspective of beauty through the main character's eyes is hideous and twisted. Morrison takes the reader into her head and shows the reader dysfunction that is horrifying. “Thigh Gap” will definitely stick with me.

Profile Image for B M.
24 reviews3 followers
September 3, 2022
This book is raw and dark.

In #thighgap Morrison gives you a glimpse into body dysmorphia and the disturbing thoughts that gravitate to it. Helen Troy may be a fictional character in this book, but what she endures for that “perfect body” with the use of drugs, fasting, and dopamine high through social media affirmation and shopping sprees. Along with her mental struggles, is an all too real problem that is often over looked and needs a larger spotlight focused on it! This book will stay with you, long after you’ve finished reading it.

Thank you to Cemetery Gates Media and Sadie Hartmann for my reviewer copy.
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