Close Menu
Pop Icon Magazine
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    Pop Icon Magazine
    • Home
    • Celebrity News
    • Movies
    • Television
    • Music
    • Books
    • Fashion & Style
    • Horror
    • Cover Story
    • Contact us
      • About us
      • Amazon Disclaimer
      • DMCA / Copyrights Disclaimer
      • Privacy Policy
      • Terms and Conditions
    Pop Icon Magazine
    Home»Books»Coram House by Bailey Seybolt
    Books

    Coram House by Bailey Seybolt

    AdminBy AdminMarch 31, 2025
    Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp
    Coram House by Bailey Seybolt

    Coram House by Bailey Seybolt

    “Coram House is a haunted — and haunting — novel, with an ending you will not see coming.”

    “That’s the thing you have to understand. The years we spent there. You can leave Coram House, but you can’t leave it behind. Not all of it. The worst of it you carry with you. It becomes part of you. And sometimes I worry you pass it on.”

    Coram House is an abandoned orphanage on the shores of Lake Champlain in Vermont, and terrible things happened there, though it’s not always clear exactly what. There are stories, though — about a girl pushed out a second-story window, a boy electrocuted trying to climb a fence, a priest who expected favors, and, especially, a nine-year-old boy named Tommy who disappeared one day. Some say he drowned in the lake as part of a “swimming lesson;” others say he simply ran away. The truth is hard to pin down.

    But the truth is what Alex Kelley is there to find out.

    In Bailey Seybolt’s Coram House, Kelley is a true crime writer, and her life is a disaster. Her husband died three years ago, and her last book was an epic failure, and so when the offer to ghostwrite a book about the orphanage comes along, it feels like it’s a lifeline, albeit a drastic one:

    “Walked away from the apartment I’ve lived in for seven years. Check. Gotten rid of most of my belongings, check. Moved to a town where I know no one. Agreed to ghostwrite a book with a complete stranger. Check, check, check.”

    She has no idea what she’s gotten into, however. All kinds of crosscurrents swirl around that place — histories and old animosities that bleed into the present. Nobody is entirely trustworthy, everybody is hiding something: “The story feels like a tree. Every time I manage to ask one question or find a new piece of information, the story branches out into three more questions, ten more, growing thinner and harder to grasp as it grows toward the sun.”

    And then people start dying, not in pleasant ways. People who were there, who might have told her things …

    Who might get her killed next …

    Filled with drama, acute psychological insight, and atmospheric writing that makes you feel the cold and hear the creak of the floorboards, Coram House is a haunted — and haunting — novel, with an ending you will not see coming. 

    Sometimes, the true monsters are the ones you cannot predict.

    The people in Coram House are fictional. The place it’s based on is not.

    “When I first moved to Burlington,” the author says, “I used to drive by this big, looming brick building overlooking Lake Champlain, beside a massive graveyard. If it sounds spooky, it was. But also beautiful and abandoned. And I thought — huh, what’s the story there?

    “It turned out to be St. Joseph’s, a Catholic orphanage that had closed back in the 70s. This was back in the winter of 2018, so Christine Kenneally had just published an in-depth investigation into the abuses at St. Joseph’s (she later expanded this into an excellent book — my narrator would have been proud! — but that didn’t exist yet).

    “It shocked me. Kids thrown out the window. Abused. Killed. Forgotten. And I think it was that disconnect between surface — historic building, nice view — and the horror of what had happened there that planted the seed in my brain.

    “At one point, my narrator wonders if evil is a seed, born inside each of us, waiting for the right conditions to thrive. And more than anything else, I think that’s what Coram House is about. Whether there’s an answer in the book, I’ll leave that up to readers.

    “For anyone who’s curious about the true history of St. Joseph’s, I cannot recommend Christine Kenneally’s Ghosts of the Orphanage enough. It’s both horrifying and riveting, a deep dive into the events at St. Joseph’s and elsewhere, and the reckoning that comes after.”

    There are other writers she recommends, too.

    “My Mom gave me a copy of Pet Sematary, and my journey to darkness began. Kidding — sort of.

    “I grew up as a voracious and eclectic reader — horror, mystery, literary, classics — which I think really shaped my love for genre fiction, but also my demand for sharply-written sentences.

    “There were a few books in particular I kept coming back to while I wrote Coram House, especially in the last stages. Mysteries that had immersive settings, built a mood, and grappled with ideas beyond plot. My desk has books by Tana French, Jessica Knoll, Daphne Du Maurier, Rebecca Makkai, Flynn Berry, Liz Moore, and others I’m sure I’m forgetting.”

    What she calls “writerly jobs” helped as well:

    “My first job out of college was as a copyeditor at the Vietnam News in Hanoi. This was the official English language newspaper of the communist government of Vietnam. So I sat next to a censor! And a man who’d been a war hero, but mostly took naps at his desk. Fast forward a few years, and I was living in Montreal, pretending I knew marketing to get a job in tech — mostly writing headlines for emails. So, yes, it’s been varied.

    “But here’s the thing: it’s all storytelling. And nothing trains you to be an editor of your own work like copywriting, where you have to explain, pique interest, and command urgency in a single headline. Even if you’re only selling cereal.”

    And even if it’s a whole book: “I always shy away from talking about process, because it feels like I’m imposing order on it in hindsight, when in reality it is very chaotic and mysterious (even to me).

    “Joan Didion wrote that her notebook was filled with ‘bits of the mind’s string too short to use.’ Which is sometimes what writing a book feels like to me. Like I’m collecting pieces of string — whether it’s an image, an idea, a setting — and then figuring out how to tie them together.”

    Also varied: her experiences in finding a publisher. “I’ve experienced both sides,” she says, “the bumpy and smooth.”

    “Kids’ books were my first love. Years ago, I wrote a Middle Grade novel and went through the entire soul-crushing query-and-rejection process. So I feel deeply for all writers in it now. Though the silver lining was, I had a non-murdery drawer novel to share with my seven-year-old. She’s a pretty harsh critic and gave it a thumbs-up, so you never know.

    “Coram House was a very different story. It took me almost three years to write it — though between having an infant, a toddler, a job, and a pandemic, it sometimes feels like a miracle I ever did. Then I sent my first query — and I think it was only six weeks from that point to when my agent sold the book.”

    That deserves an exclamation point.  Next up is a novel set on an island in Maine. She won’t say much about it — “It’s nearly done, though I’m sure I’ve jinxed myself saying that out loud.” But notes, “I find islands so fascinating – the isolation, the way microcultures develop and people know each other for generations. It feels like fertile ground for a mystery.”

    Yes, it does.


    About Bailey Seybolt:

    Bailey Seybolt grew up in New York City. She studied literature at Brown University and creative writing at Concordia University. She’s worked as a travel writer in Hanoi, a tech writer in San Francisco, and many writerly jobs in between. She now lives with her family in Vermont, not far from Lake Champlain. Coram House is her debut novel.

    Coram House by Bailey Seybolt

    Publish Date: 4/15/2025

    Genre: Thrillers

    Author: Bailey Seybolt

    Page Count: 320 pages

    Publisher: Atria Books

    ISBN: 9781668057001

    Originally Published Here.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Reddit WhatsApp
    Previous ArticleDress Code: Canary | FashionBeans
    Next Article Mikey Madison Spoofs SpongeBob as an HBO Drama on SNL

    Related Posts

    8 Summer Reads About Friends Bonding Over a Pact

    May 16, 2026

    Interview with CJ Holmes, Author of Labyrinthine

    May 16, 2026

    Book Censorship News, May 15, 2026

    May 15, 2026

    Marsha Taylor on Finding God in Life’s Hardest Seasons

    May 15, 2026

    New Young Adult Books to Read | May 12

    May 14, 2026

    There’s a Season 3 of Good Omens, Even After All of the Neil Gaiman Accusations

    May 14, 2026
    Popular Posts

    8 Smart Casual Loafer Outfits For Men

    Fashion & Style

    Ariel Winter and Luke Benward Split After Nearly 6 Years

    Celebrity News

    The Batman 2 Cast Adds MCU Star as Matt Reeves Confirms More for DC Movie

    Movies

    The Lincoln Lawyer Was Canceled Before It Even Began — That’s Why Five Seasons Feels Miraculous

    Television

    World Cup Halftime Show to Feature Dynamic Trio of Madonna, BTS, and Shakira

    Music

    New Young Adult Books to Read | May 12

    Books

    Taylor Paul Asks Bachelorette’s Doug for Help After Reunion

    Celebrity News
    Music

    Mick Jagger Shares How Robert Smith Ended up on the Rolling Stones’ New Album

    Music

    Rolling Stones Speak ‘Foreign Tongues’ On New LP

    Music

    Sync Licensing and Music Distribution – One Platform That Does It All

    Celebrity News

    The Musicians Who Understood the Assignment

    Music

    M.I.A. Booted From Kid Cudi Tour After ‘Offensive Remarks’

    Music
    Categories
    • Books (2,823)
    • Celebrity News (2,617)
    • Cover Story (46)
    • Fashion & Style (2,113)
    • Horror (2,873)
    • Movies (3,244)
    • Music (3,694)
    • Politics (3)
    • Television (2,954)
    Movies

    Josh Brolin’s R-Rated Zombie Movie Sets Peacock Streaming Date

    Movies

    Homelander Becomes Immortal in The Boys’ Captain America: Civil War

    Movies

    Neil Patrick Harris Is a Neo-Nazi in The Last Temptation of Becky First Look

    Movies

    Dwayne Johnson Explains the Masculinity Behind His Bold Met Gala Skirt

    Movies

    Fox Cancels Comedy TV Show After 2 Seasons

    Movies
    Horror

    Send Help Review – Sam Raimi Is Back In Fine Splatstick Form

    Horror

    The Bloodiest And Most Disgusting Segments

    Horror

    ‘Attack of the Killer Tomatoes: Organic Intelligence’ Teaser Previews USS Midway Museum Screening

    Horror

    ‘Lenskeeper’ Trailer – Lovecraft Meets Fulci Meets Barker in Cosmic Horror Film

    Horror

    ‘Repo! The Genetic Opera’ 4K Release in the Works

    Horror
    Archives
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram Pinterest YouTube LinkedIn WhatsApp Reddit TikTok
    © 2026 Pop Icon Magazine. All rights reserved. All articles, images, product names, logos, and brands are property of their respective owners. All company, product and service names used in this website are for identification purposes only. Use of these names, logos, and brands does not imply endorsement unless specified. By using this site, you agree to the Terms of Use and Privacy Policy.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.