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  • abuse (primarily psychological), death of family members, murder, characters dealing with mental illness

 

A Dark and Starless Forest

2022 Locus Award for Young Adult Novel nominee ∙ 2022 Dragon Award for Best Young Adult/Middle Grade Novel winner

When her siblings start to go missing, a girl must confront the dark thing that lives in the forest—and the growing darkness in herself—in this debut YA contemporary fantasy for fans of Wilder Girls.

Derry and her eight siblings live in an isolated house by the lake, separated from the rest of the world by an eerie and menacing forest. Frank, the man who raised them after their families abandoned them, says it’s for their own good. After all, the world isn’t safe for people with magic. And Derry feels safe—most of the time.

Until the night her eldest sister disappears. Jane and Derry swore to each other that they’d never go into the forest, not after their last trip ended in blood, but Derry is sure she saw Jane walk into the trees. When another sibling goes missing and Frank’s true colors start to show, feeling safe is no longer an option. Derry will risk anything to protect the family she has left. Even if that means returning to the forest that has started calling to Derry in her missing siblings’ voices.

As Derry spends more time amidst the trees, her magic grows more powerful . . . and so does the darkness inside her, the viciousness she wants to pretend doesn’t exist. But saving her siblings from the forest and from Frank might mean embracing the darkness. And that just might be the most dangerous thing of all.

This is the playlist I primarily listened to while writing A Dark and Starless Forest. The songs don’t necessarily align to certain scenes or characters, but it instead captures the vibes I wanted in the book.

Fun fact: When I was finishing the first draft of the book, up until 3AM, furiously typing, I had a single song on repeat for hours, and that was “One Foot in Front of the Other” by Emilie Autumn.