Leslie J. Anderson has spent much of her life riding, training, and caring for horses. Her collection of poetry, An Inheritance of Stone, was nominated for an Elgin award. She has a Creative Writing MA from Ohio University and lives in Ohio with her family. This is her debut novel.
“Desolate, heartrending, and genuinely scary.”—Gretchen Felker-Martin, author of Manhunt “The Unmothers is exquisite and haunting in equal measure. . . . Nauseatingly tense and crushingly insightful. This book represents an absolutely vital entry into the horror canon.”—Sarah Gailey, nationally best-selling author of The Echo Wife and Just Like Home “At the crossroads of True Detective and Emma Donoghue’s The Wonder, this equine Wicker Man manifests a mood equal parts majestic and terrifying, tragic and sublime. A rust belt gothic of Lynchian proportions, The Unmothers will linger long after you’re done riding—I mean reading.”—Clay McLeod Chapman, author of What Kind of Mother and Ghost Eaters “Leslie Anderson writes with searing honesty and a palpable compassion for her characters in this story about the terrifying ways people cling to—and weaponize—belief systems. The Unmothers is riveting; the evil it depicts is insidious and real. You will easily fall captive to the eerie town of Raeford and its monsters.”—Anne Heltzel, author of Just Like Mother “The Unmothers is a grimly beautiful novel about the terrifying collective power of women’s sublimated hope, grief, and rage. Leslie J. Anderson deftly balances poetic horror and unflinching realism in a powerful debut. This is folk horror for a forgotten America.”—Emily C. Hughes, author of Horror for Weenies and former editor of TorNightfire.com “The Unmothers is brilliant. It is beautiful, heartbreaking, terrifying, and sharply intelligent. This book reminds me why I fell in love with folk horror in the first place. It also made me respect and love horses in a way I never have before! Anderson has such a pure sense of character and place, this might be the most perfectly nuanced book I’ve read in a long time. You won’t want to leave Raeford behind.”—Sam Rebelein, author of Edenville “Terrifying in its beauty, horror, and power, this is a breathless read and a groundbreaking debut. You will never forget its dark spell.”—Alison Stine, Philip K. Dick Award–winning author of Road Out of Winter and Trashlands “Haunting. Anderson’s deft debut fuses intriguing small-town mystery, disturbing horror, and a supernatural horse cult into an urgent and original tale.”—James Kennedy, author of Bride of the Tornado and Dare to Know