On a cold November night, Evelyn Van Pelt steals her roommate’s two underfed and neglected little girls from their beds and drives to the northwestern hometown she fled fourteen years earlier—Cormorant Lake. There, hidden in the mountains and woods, dense with fog and the cold of winter, Evelyn grapples with the guilt of what she’s done, and as she attempts to reconcile her wild independence with the responsibilities of parenthood, she reconnects with the two women who raised her—her foster mother, Nan, and her biological mother, Jubilee. But by coming home, she has set in motion a series of events that will revive the decades-old tragedy that haunts Cormorant Lake—and lead her to confront the high cost of protecting her secret.
At once fantastical and deeply rooted in the natural world, Faith Merino’s deeply affecting and spirited debut novel explores the shape of family, the enduring bonds of friendship, and the imperfections of motherhood—messy and beautiful, instinctive and learned, temporal but permanently life-altering.
Faith Merino is the author of Cormorant Lake, which was longlisted for The Center for Fiction’s 2021 First Novel Award. Her short stories have appeared in Asimov’s Science Fiction, The Magazine of Fantasy and Science Fiction, The Indiana Review, Uncharted Magazine, and more. She is a former Stegner Fellow at Stanford University, with an MFA in fiction from UC Davis, and she currently teaches English at Folsom Lake College.