The Children
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Melissa Albert
'A joyously grim, open-eyed, adult fairy tale with the messiest of morals' PAUL TREMBLAY
'An insidious and masterfully cast spell of a book . . . Gorgeous and dreadful, I devoured it' MONA AWAD
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Their childhood was yours. They want it back . . .
Guinevere’s late mother, Edith Sharpe, needs little introduction. Bestselling author of the unendingly successful Ninth City series, her books brought so much joy and inspired the imagination of countless children the world over. Guin’s childhood with her mother, brother Ennis and her actor father was a blissful, bohemian affair, filled with continuous laughter and surrounded by artistic types in their Vermont barnhouse. At least, this is the story Guin presents as she prepares for the press tour for her upcoming memoir about life in the Sharpe family.
Now estranged from her brother and her parents long dead after a devastating fire, strange events threaten the veneer of serenity and familial harmony Guin is keen to project. Ennis, now a notorious artist with a troubled past, announces a new installation – his first since a disastrous last show one year prior – simply entitled Mother. And Guin can’t help but worry that the truth behind their idyllic childhood is about to blow her world apart.
Told in alternating narratives between 1990s Vermont and present-day New York, The Children is a twisting narrative of family secrets and long-held resentments, which asks whether we can ever really exorcise the ghosts of a childhood forsaken in favour of a parent’s artistic vision.
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'A poison apple of a book: glossy, sweet, and absolutely terrifying' ALIX E. HARROW
'Twisty and strange in all the best ways' HEATHER FAWCETT©2026 Melissa Albert
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Critic reviews
This is an extraordinary book. A page-turner full of mystery . . . The language is dusted with magic . . . My advice: Be first in line (STEPHEN KING, author of It)
I might end up using all the adjectives to describe this sharp, lyrical, nuanced riff on family dysfunction and the costs of devoting oneself to art. The Children is a joyously grim, open-eyed, adult fairy tale with the messiest of morals (and I mean that as the highest possible praise), and I had so much damned fun reading it (PAUL TREMBLAY, New York Times-bestselling author of Horror Movie and A Head Full of Ghosts)
Profound, beguiling and terrifying, Melissa Albert’s first novel for adults is dangerous witchcraft of the highest order – an insidious and masterfully cast spell of a book about the stories we tell ourselves and each other, childhood’s end and the way that the sharp edges of creative lives draw so much blood. The Children is gorgeous and dreadful, I devoured it (MONA AWAD, bestselling author of Bunny)
I don't know how, but Melissa Albert has taken my most private nightmares and desires and published them as a dark fairy tale. The Children is a poison apple of a book: glossy, sweet, and absolutely terrifying. I don't think I'll ever get it out of my bloodstream (ALIX E. HARROW, New York Times-bestselling author of The Everlasting)
Melissa Albert has done it again with this eerily beautiful adult debut. Twisty and strange in all the best ways, and rendered in Albert's characteristic dreamlike prose, The Children is exactly the grown-up fairytale I've been looking for. I loved Guin and her complicated relationships, as well as the deft interweaving of memories, stories, and reality – and the many places where they blur. Highly recommend (HEATHER FAWCETT, New York Times-bestselling author of the Emily Wilde Series)
What is the real cost of a good story? And who is forced to pay it? With The Children, Melissa Albert places a hissing, twitching shadow in the periphery of your vision – but when you turn to look, hoping to assuage your terror, it’s gone. I loved this shimmering, sinister oracle of a book (GENNAROSE NETHERCOTT, author of Thistlefoot)
Haunting, dreamlike, and emotionally fearless, The Children is a reckoning. A book about memory, legacy, and the stories we tell ourselves to survive. The Children proves once again that Melissa Albert is one of the most singular voices writing today. Simply put: I loved it (SHEA ERSNSHAW, #1 NYT bestselling author of The Wicked Deep)
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