Dark Sisters
Kristi DeMeester. St. Martin’s, $29 (336p) ISBN 978-1-250-28681-9
This thrilling horror outing from DeMeester (Such a Pretty Smile) blends queer romance and supernatural vengeance across three timelines, all of which revolve around the Dark Sisters, an urban legend haunting the small town of Hawthorne Springs. In the 1750s, Anne, a widow skilled in herbal medicine, is forced to flee into the woods with her daughter, Florence, amid widening accusations of witchcraft. There they discover a mysterious tree that Anne recognizes as possessing “ancient power.” In the 1950s, Mary, a deeply frustrated housewife, falls in love with kindred spirit Sharon, but their forbidden affair ends tragically. And in the early 2000s, Camilla, a teenager whose father is the pastor of the powerful, cultlike church that presides over the town with an iron fist, discovers that she is deeply linked to the Dark Sisters. DeMeester’s electrifying prose conjures three wonderfully complex female leads, though Camilla’s voice feels just a tad less developed than the other two women. After a somewhat slow start, the novel hits its stride at the halfway point, from which it gallops along to a breathtaking conclusion in which the three timelines converge and the heroines face down a generational evil. Grotesque, weird, and entirely unflinching, this tale of female empowerment packs a punch. (Dec.)
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Reviewed on: 09/18/2025
Genre: Sci-Fi/Fantasy/Horror