cover image Strange Animals

Strange Animals

Jarod K. Anderson. Ballantine, $29 (320p) ISBN 979-8-217-09246-8

Anderson (Something in the Woods Loves You) delivers a haunting and atmospheric urban fantasy populated by quirky human characters and fabulously weird mythical creatures. It kicks off with protagonist Green dying and coming back to life, his death having been stolen by a giant crow. After this bizarre encounter, he feels an inexplicable call to the Catskill mountains, where he’s determined to camp while seeking fulfillment. On his first night at the remote Candle-Fly Camp, he barely survives a strange encounter with a glowing, translucent deer and a partially skinned horned wolf that addresses him as “not-man” before vanishing. Fortunately, Green’s new, reclusive neighbor, Valentina, is a cryptonaturalist and expert in such unusual phenomenon and agrees to take him on as an apprentice. Thus begins Green’s education in the unseen and unexpected, as Valentina introduces him to all manner of cryptids and helps him investigate why these creatures are appearing to him. She also reveals that the glass fawn, the technical name for the translucent deer, is said to bring death to all who see it, meaning Green’s time may be running out. Anderson’s worldbuilding is wonderfully bizarre, and there’s an introspective bent to the ecologically minded narrative that gives Green’s journey an intimate feel as he finds new friends, purpose, and home. The result is a wholly captivating tale of magic and nature. (Feb.)