Picnic at Hanging Rock + The Blair Witch Project x lesbians =
Plain Bad Heroines
Our story begins in 1902, at The Brookhants School for Girls. Flo and Clara, two impressionable students, are obsessed with each other and with a daring young writer named Mary MacLane, the author of a scandalous bestselling memoir. To show their devotion to Mary, the girls establish their own private club and call it The Plain Bad Heroine Society. They meet in secret in a nearby apple orchard, the setting of their wildest happiness and, ultimately, of their macabre deaths. This is where their bodies are later discovered with a copy of Mary’s book splayed beside them, the victims of a swarm of stinging, angry yellow jackets. Less than five years later, The Brookhants School for Girls closes its doors forever —but not before three more people mysteriously die on the property, each in a most troubling way.
Over a century later, the now abandoned and crumbling Brookhants is back in the news when wunderkind writer Merritt Emmons publishes a breakout book celebrating the queer, feminist history surrounding the “haunted and cursed” Gilded-Age institution. Her bestselling book has inspired a controversial horror film adaptation starring celesbian it girl Harper Harper, who plays the ill-fated heroine, Flo, opposite B-list actress and former child star Audrey Wells as Clara. But as Brookhants opens its gates once again, and our three modern heroines arrive on set to begin filming, past and present become grimly entangled—or perhaps just grimly exploited— and soon it’s impossible to tell where the curse leaves off and Hollywood begins.
Plain Bad Heroines is a sapphic-gothic haunted house novel that knows it's a novel and wants you to remember that too, Dear Readers.
• INDIEBOUND • HARPERCOLLINS •
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Plain Bad Heroines wears its brilliance lightly and like the Black Oxford apples described in these pages, it’s dark, sweet, and addictive. Emily Danforth displays all the gothic wit of an Edward Gorey and all the soaring metafictional ambitions of a David Mitchell... alongside a generosity and humanity that is uniquely her own. Simply one of the best books I’ve read in the last decade.
–Joe Hill, author of The Fireman, NOS4A2, and Heart Shaped Box
Emily Danforth’s ingenious, jaw-dropping novel is a time-hopping epic about the history of a cursed New England girls’ school, doomed lovers, and an equally cursed modern-day retelling via film, plus yellow jackets. Hell, those yellow jackets! The expertly rendered characters are as heartbreaking as they are written with an integrity of vision that saturates every page. Plain Bad Heroines is a queer roar and it’s terrifying and it’s a goddamned triumph.
–Paul Tremblay, author of The Cabin at the End of the World, Head Full of Ghosts
Illustrations by Sara Lautman