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About this item
Highlights
- "Dark and delectable.
- Author(s): Ellery Adams
- 352 Pages
- Fiction + Literature Genres, Magical Realism
Description
Book Synopsis
"Dark and delectable. I gobbled this book up and enjoyed every last bite."
--Kirsten Miller, author of The Change and The Women of Wild Hill
The women in Cold Harbor all have something to prove, and they'll have to do it in a world full of monsters.
Something's not right in Cold Harbor--more so than usual. While this sleepy small town has seen its fair share of monsters in cheating husbands and leering bosses, none are as hungry as Mrs. Smith. The mysterious resident has finally emerged from her crumbling mansion on the hill, mesmerizing the townspeople with her beauty. Her secret? Nine human sacrifices to feed her immortality.
Natalie Scott is more worried about Mrs. Smith blocking her first real estate sale--the one that will take her from stay-at-home mom to working woman extraordinaire. She's eager to prove herself in a world where the social mores of 1980s suburbia reign, where she's expected to keep a magazine-perfect home and raise beautiful children, all while sticking to her husband's budget. Natalie's two best friends are facing their own demons, and Mrs. Smith and her deep, dark woods are an easy scapegoat for everyone's problems.
But Natalie's twelve-year-old daughter, Jill, and her Icelandic housekeeper, Una, can sense something deeper at play. Armed with library books and a whole lot of grit, Jill and Una team up to save the town once and for all. But as the rest of Cold Harbor sinks into anger, fear, and jealousy, they'll have to confront the question: What does it really mean to be a monster?
Review Quotes
"Dark and delectable. I gobbled this book up and enjoyed every last bite."
--Kirsten Miller, author of The Change and The Women of Wild Hill
"Ellery Adams makes prey out of us all with Invasive Species, proving there are many, many more taxonomies of terror left to be discovered within the depths of our bookshelves. This book is such a beautiful, brackish blend of monstrous mythology and domestic drama, you could consider it The Real Housewives of Eldritch Horror."
--Clay McLeod Chapman, author of Wake Up and Open Your Eyes
"Invasive Species takes the familiar landscape of 1980s suburbia and infuses it with genuine dread, weaving together Greek legend, Icelandic folklore, and the everyday monsters of patriarchal expectations. Ellery Adams turns myth into menace with a story that's as sharp as it is strange, where every page hums with unease. One of the most original horror stories I've read in years."
--Crystal King, author of The Happiness Collector