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The Place Where They Buried Your Heart is bestselling horror and dark fantasy author Christina Henry’s first hardcover release. Her previous titles include The House That Horror Built, Good Girls Don’t Die, Near the Bone, The Ghost Tree, The Chronicles of Alice series, and the seven-book urban fantasy Black Wings series. Her short stories have appeared in Elemental Forces, Cursed, Twice Cursed, Giving the Devil His Due, and Kicking It. In her spare time, she enjoys running long distances, reading anything she can get her hands on, and watching movies with samurai, zombies, and/or subtitles.


Schedule

1:00 pm to 1:45 pm
State Library, Fifth Floor, Serials
The Architecture of Evil: Haunted Houses, Broken Hearts, and Horror That Doesn’t Hold Back
Brian Asman, Man, F*ck This House (and Other Disasters)
Christina Henry, The Place Where They Buried Your Heart
with moderator Adrian Van Young

2:00 pm to 2:45 pm
Cavalier House Books Tent
Book Signing


The Place Where They Buried Your Heart

A woman must confront the evil that has been terrorizing her street since she was a child in this gripping haunted house novel from the national bestselling author of The House That Horror Built and Good Girls Don’t Die.

On an otherwise ordinary street in Chicago, there is a house. An abandoned house where, once upon a time, terrible things happened. The children who live on this block are told by their parents to stay away from that house. But of course, children don’t listen. Children think it’s fun to be scared, to dare each other to go inside.

Jessie Campanelli did what many older sisters do and dared her little brother Paul. But unlike all the other kids who went inside that abandoned house, Paul didn’t return. His two friends, Jake and Richie, said that the house ate Paul. Of course adults didn’t believe that. Adults never believe what kids say. They thought someone kidnapped Paul, or otherwise hurt him. They thought Paul had disappeared in a way that was ordinary, explainable.

The disappearance of her little brother broke Jessie’s family apart in ways that would never be repaired. Jessie grew up, had a child of her own, kept living on the same street where the house that ate her brother sat, crouched and waiting. And darkness seemed to spread out from that house, a darkness that was alive—alive and hungry.