Description

The Walter Award Honor–winning author of Root Magic returns with a terrifying story in the Southern Gothic tradition, inspired by the hoodoo practice of hair burning.

At night, Roddie still dreams of sitting at his mother’s feet while she braids his Afro down. But that’s a memory from before. Before his mom died in a tragic accident. Before he was taken in by an aunt he barely knows. Before his aunt brought him to Dogwood House, the creepiest place Roddie has ever seen. It was his family’s home for over a hundred years. Now the house—abandoned and rotting, draped in Spanish moss that reminds him too much of hair—is his home too.

Aunt Angie has returned to South Carolina to take care of Roddie and reconnect with their family’s hoodoo roots. Roddie, however, can’t help but feel lost. His mom had never told him anything about hoodoo, Dogwood House, or their family. And as they set about fixing the house up, Roddie discovers that there is even more his mother never said. Like why she left home when she was seventeen, never to return. Or why she insisted Aunt Angie always wear her hair in locs. Or what she knew of the strange secrets hidden deep within Dogwood House—secrets that have awoken again, and are reaching out to Roddie…


  • Creepy Paranormal Setting: A crumbling family home in South Carolina, draped in Spanish moss that looks too much like hair, holds generations of secrets in its rotting walls.
  • Hoodoo Magic and Lore: Roddie discovers a world his mother kept hidden—a heritage of hoodoo practices, including the mysterious ritual of hair burning to keep ancient evils away.
  • A Haunted House Story: Dogwood House isn’t just old; it’s awake. As Roddie explores its decaying halls, he realizes the house itself is reaching out, and it wants something from him.
  • A Heartfelt Story of Grief and Loss: At its core, this is a powerful story about a boy navigating the loss of his mother, finding the courage to face his fears, and learning that family is something you build.

About the author(s)

Eden Royce is a writer from Charleston, SC, now living in the garden of England. Her debut novel, Root Magic, was a Walter Dean Myers Award Honoree, an ALA Notable Children's Book, a Mythopoeic Fantasy Award winner, and a Nebula Award Finalist for outstanding children’s literature. She is also a Shirley Jackson Award finalist for her short fiction for adults. You can find her online at edenroyce.com.

Reviews

"Royce employs marvelously eerie ambiance to craft a tale that is at once a moving narrative about grief and remembrance and a frightening, slow-burning haunted house adventure." - Publishers Weekly

"Eden Royce's thriller has all the earmarks of a classic haunted house tale paired with deeply-woven family traditions centered on hoodoo and Black hair. While the horror plot will keep you turning the pages, it's the emotional story of grief and family healing that will have you cheering at the end." - Tracey Baptiste, New York Times-bestselling author of The Jumbies

"Royce’s latest offers readers a strong, character-centered, hoodoo-infused narrative that’s a tribute to the beauty of Black hair. Richly detailed settings and themes of family, heritage, and grief provide anchors for the creepy mystery. A thrilling, hair-raising story with strong cultural roots and a well-developed sense of place." - Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"Royce effectively builds suspense while cleverly interweaving facts about hoodoo. She provides a realistic portrayal of the way grief ebbs and flows amidst a kid-friendly scary story that includes a quest for answers, a confrontation with a monster, and a house that transforms to reveal family secrets after dark." - The Horn Book

"Royce offers up an excellent middle-grade horror story full of eerie atmosphere that nicely folds in the importance of connections to cultural history, meaningful examinations of grief, the literal power of Black hair, and how to find light in darkness." - Booklist

"Royce charms readers with another work of intriguing supernatural fiction laced with historical context. By both offering engaging characters and successfully demystifying hoodoo, this will encourage discussion among kids that may spark a curious exploration into their own culture." - Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books

More by Eden Royce

More Horror

More Juvenile Fiction

More Legends, Myths, Fables

More Paranormal, Occult & Supernatural

More Death, Grief, Bereavement

More Social Themes

More African American & Black

More United States

More Places

More Orphans & Foster Homes

More Family

More Parents

More Emotions & Feelings

More Mysteries & Detective Stories