cover image Sacrificial Animals

Sacrificial Animals

Kailee Pedersen. St. Martin’s, $29 (304p) ISBN 978-1-250-32824-3

The mythic Chinese figure of the nine-tailed fox spirit goes Midwestern Gothic in Pederson’s unsettling debut, which tracks the rise and fall of the Morrow family of Stag’s Crossing, a 1,000-acre farm in Nebraska. The narrative toggles between “then” and “now.” “Then” follows the three Morrow men—father Carlyle, older son Joshua, and youngest son Nick—as they hunt a deer and a fox after killing the fox’s cubs. In the sections labeled “now,” Carlyle is dying of bone cancer and hopes to reconcile with his sons, who have become estranged after Carlyle disowned Joshua for marrying Emilia, an Asian woman with a mysterious past. As Joshua is drawn back to the farm, Nick, now a jaded literary critic, develops an intense fascination with Emilia. The two timelines come together in an unexpected and clever way, leading to a supernatural and bloody denouement. The close third-person narration stays mainly on Nick, whose mind proves unpleasant and unsettling to spend so much time inside, but this will be a feature, not a bug, to readers of grisly, literary horror that isn’t afraid to show its teeth. Pedersen is sure to win fans. Agent: Paul Lucas, Janklow & Nesbit Assoc. (Aug)