opens in a new windowHeartsong opens in a new window by TJ Klune is on sale now and we’re all just over the (full) moon (awoo) about it! We love thinking about werewolves and other monsters, and that got us thinking about this list we put together last year with all our literary monster crushes… If you missed our heartfelt confessions, check them out, and then check out Heartsong!
Monsters evoke a lot of emotions in us. In many ways they are fragments of our vulnerabilities and our fears, given shape and story by artists brave enough to dream them up. They’re also sometimes the object of our affections—fear isn’t the only emotion at play, folks!
We’ve compiled a list of monsters, deities, and mythical creatures we love. Enjoy 😈
opens in a new windowZinandour, Dragon of Qarsazh — opens in a new windowThe Unspoken Name & opens in a new windowThe Thousand Eyes by A. K. Larkwood
She is the flame that devours and definitely a bad influence—a profoundly tragic force of banished calamity. Her magi are infinitely suspicious of her, and they should be, because Zinandour is the intrusive whispers in their minds, the little voice that wheedles wouldn’t it be nice to burn everything and languish in the heat of the inferno? She’s scary, and what’s scarier: you’re starting to think she might be right…
a cat, Assistant Marketing Manager
opens in a new windowThe Bennett Family – The Green Creek series by TJ Klunes
Do we really need to explain? THEY ARE WEREWOLVES. Werewolves. As they say, packpackpack. Sometimes they will leave a dead rabbit on your doorstep. Other times they really need a good tackle hug to get their scent on you. Every so often, one will lose control and you’ll be there to guide them back to who they are at heart. It’s a lifetime commitment, but with a giant wolf by your side, what more could you want?
Becky, Senior Manager of Ad/Promo & Marketing
opens in a new window[REDACTED] – opens in a new windowBook of Night by Holly Black
Julia, Marketing Manager
opens in a new windowArthur Parnassus — opens in a new windowThe House in the Cerulean Sea & opens in a new windowSomewhere Beyond the Sea by TJ Klune
Burns Alike
opens in a new windowJohann – opens in a new windowThe Monster of Elendhaven by Jennifer Giesbrecht
Johann, the titular monster of this dark little novella, commits brutal crimes aplenty and yet he still has my heart. He’s a pale, slinking thing that creeps through the shadowed streets of Elendhaven murdering with abandon, but frankly, he has his reasons, and at the end of the day, he just wants to be loved. I spent the whole book rooting for this depraved creature of the night to find his happy ending.
Merlin Hoye, Marketing Assistant