
Best of the Spectator The Book Club: The Decadence
Nov 27, 2025
Leon Craig, a debut novelist, dives into her provocative book The Decadence, a haunted-house tale exploring millennial excess. She reveals how the pandemic influenced her themes of betrayal and power, weaving in literary nods to Boccaccio and Shirley Jackson. Craig reflects on character dynamics, the complexity of her protagonist Jan, and the resurgence of horror in today's uncertain climate. With a blend of gothic inspiration and contemporary dread, she discusses how the house itself symbolizes exclusion and reflects societal issues.
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Horror As A Lens On Power
- Leon Craig frames The Decadence as a haunted-house story about six disaffected millennials on an illegal pandemic getaway.
- The supernatural element reveals deeper questions of betrayal, power and collective culpability.
Florence, Decameron, And The Pandemic
- Leon Craig first got the idea sitting in Florence reading the Decameron as an 18‑year‑old and found the original noble characters unbelievable.
- The COVID pandemic later crystallised what she wanted to say and refocused the project into a novel.
Characters First, Supernatural Second
- The story began with character relationships rather than a plot or pure supernatural idea.
- Craig realised the supernatural suited exposing toxic dynamics and questions of who holds power.
















