Literary Horror · Chicago
Now
Wendy Darling in London, 1914. A schoolteacher at an orphanage. A soldier in a coma who whispers the name Peter Pan. A nursery rhyme that opens a door that should have stayed shut.
A devastating re-imagining of a classic. It Came From Neverland will sweep you off your feet and terrify you in equal measure. A striking achievement, and a book you don’t want to miss. — Gwendolyn Kiste, four-time Bram Stoker Award–winning author
Coming
An international anthology of Latiné horror. Foreword by Brenda Lozano.
Featuring Mariana Enríquez, Agustina Bazterrica, Mónica Ojeda, Isabel Cañas, Daniel José Older, Zoraida Córdova, Ann Dávila Cardinal, and others.
About
Cynthia Pelayo is a Bram Stoker Award–winning and International Latino Book Award–winning author and poet — the first Latina and the first Puerto Rican to win the Bram Stoker Award. She writes fairy tales that blend genre and explore grief, mourning, and cycles of violence. Chicago is not her setting. Chicago is her cosmology.
She is the author of Lotería, Poems of My Night, Into the Forest and All the Way Through, Children of Chicago, Crime Scene, The Shoemaker’s Magician, Forgotten Sisters, Vanishing Daughters, and It Came From Neverland, as well as dozens of standalone stories and poems.
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