Where to Start with Silvia Moreno-Garcia: A Reading Guide
Where to start with Silvia Moreno-Garcia — whether to begin with Mexican Gothic or Gods of Jade and Shadow. A complete reading guide to the Mexican fantasy novelist.
Silvia Moreno-Garcia (born 1981) is the Mexican-Canadian author whose novel Mexican Gothic (2020) — a Gothic horror novel set in 1950s Mexico — became an international bestseller and one of the most celebrated speculative fiction novels of its year, establishing her as a major voice in fantasy and horror fiction. Moreno-Garcia’s work is consistently grounded in Mexican history, landscape, and mythology; she writes against the Eurocentric defaults of Gothic and fantasy fiction while fully inhabiting their genre conventions.
Where to Start: Mexican Gothic (2020)
The essential Moreno-Garcia — and one of the finest Gothic novels of the past decade. Noemí Taboada is twenty-two years old, beautiful, intelligent, and entirely comfortable at Mexico City cocktail parties. When her recently married cousin Catalina sends a letter describing strange visions, a mysterious illness, and a husband who seems to be controlling her every thought, Noemí’s father sends her to investigate.
El Triunfo is a former silver-mining town in the mountains of Hidalgo. High Place, the Doyle family’s mansion, is English colonial and decaying — a remnant of the town’s silver-boom days. The family matriarch, Florence Doyle, controls everything. The patriarch, Howard Doyle, is ancient and unsettling. Noemí’s cousin Catalina is pale and confused. And the house is alive.
Moreno-Garcia builds her horror from two traditions simultaneously: the English Gothic (the decaying house, the imperilled woman, the sinister family secret) and the specific history of Mexican colonialism (the silver mine’s indigenous workforce, the English family’s eugenic beliefs, the mansion as a physical remnant of extractive colonial wealth). The horror is biological as well as psychological; the novel’s final sections are genuinely disturbing.
The writing is elegant and controlled. Noemí is a pleasure to follow — competent, skeptical, and funny in ways that counterbalance the Gothic atmosphere without deflating it. For readers interested in literary horror, Gothic fiction, or speculative fiction set outside Europe, Mexican Gothic is one of the best recent examples of the form.
Gods of Jade and Shadow (2019)
The Mayan mythology novel — a young woman from the Yucatán helping the god of death recover his throne across 1920s Mexico. Different in tone (more road-novel than Gothic) but equally grounded in Mexican history and culture. An excellent follow-on.
Reading Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Begin with Mexican Gothic — it is her most acclaimed and widely read novel. Read Gods of Jade and Shadow after for a different genre mode and an earlier period of Mexican history. Both are standalone.
For the full Silvia Moreno-Garcia bibliography, reviews, and biography, visit the Silvia Moreno-Garcia author page on Editors Reads.
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Frequently Asked Questions
Where should I start with Silvia Moreno-Garcia?
Mexican Gothic (2020) is the essential starting point — Moreno-Garcia's Gothic horror novel set in 1950s Mexico, following socialite Noemí Taboada who travels to a remote mansion to rescue her cousin from a strange and controlling marriage. Became an international bestseller and one of the most acclaimed speculative fiction novels of its year; the best introduction to Moreno-Garcia's blend of Mexican setting, social critique, and genre fiction. Gods of Jade and Shadow is the stronger second read for readers who want her Mayan mythology work.
What is Mexican Gothic about?
Mexican Gothic follows Noemí Taboada, a glamorous Mexico City socialite in 1950, who travels to El Triunfo — a remote mining town in the mountains — after receiving a disturbing letter from her newly married cousin Catalina. At High Place, the English Doyle family's decaying mansion, Noemí encounters a household of controlled silences, strange dreams, biological horror, and a matriarch who seems to be slowly consuming Catalina. The novel draws on Gothic conventions (the threatening house, the endangered young woman, the sinister patriarch) while grounding them specifically in Mexico's colonial history and the experience of indigenous oppression.
What is Gods of Jade and Shadow about?
Gods of Jade and Shadow (2019) is Moreno-Garcia's novel set in 1920s Mexico, following Casiopea Tun — a Mayan girl from a town in the Yucatán — who accidentally releases the Mayan god of death, Hun-Kamé, from a box where he has been imprisoned by his brother. Casiopea must help Hun-Kamé recover his throne while navigating the Jazz Age settings of Mérida, Mexico City, and Tijuana. A road novel built on Mayan mythology, with Moreno-Garcia's characteristic attention to the specific texture of Mexican history and culture.
Are Silvia Moreno-Garcia's books horror or fantasy?
Moreno-Garcia works across genre categories: Mexican Gothic is Gothic horror with body horror elements; Gods of Jade and Shadow is historical fantasy built on Mayan mythology. Both books use speculative elements to examine specifically Mexican historical experiences — colonialism, indigenous history, class and race in twentieth-century Mexico. Readers of either genre will find her books rewarding; she is particularly recommended for readers who want speculative fiction grounded in non-Eurocentric settings and mythologies.

