Tor Nightfire
Find Me Where It Ends by Cassandra Khaw (Hardcover) (PREORDER)
Find Me Where It Ends by Cassandra Khaw (Hardcover) (PREORDER)
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Fiction - Horror - Occult & Supernatural - Psychological - Fantasy - Dark Fantasy
RELEASE DATE: 10/6/2026 (WILL SHIP DIRECTLY FROM OUR SUPPLIER'S WAREHOUSE)
A young woman wakes up to find the black hound of Death at her front door in this hauntingly beautiful tale from USA Today bestselling author Cassandra Khaw.
Antigone is no stranger to death.
For the women of her family, death always comes in the form of a black dog.
When Antigone’s own black dog arrives, she isn’t afraid. She invites it inside, where it soon becomes a daily source of companionship and comfort. It also forces her to reflect on the life she’s led―the parts of herself she’s hollowed out for the sake of others, and the bone-deep exhaustion that’s hounded her every step.
Her Death’s arrival must be a sign, permission to finally let go. To rest. Because while mortality is inevitable, living is a choice.
But a good death comes at a price.
Also by Cassnadra Khaw:
The Library at Hellebore
The Salt Grows Heavy
Nothing But Blackened Teeth
A Song for Quiet
Hammers on Bone
The Dead Take the A Train (co-written with Richard Kadrey)
AUTHOR BIO:
CASSANDRA KHAW is the USA Today bestselling and Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Library at Hellebore, Nothing But Blackened Teeth, The Salt Grows Heavy, Breakable Things, and coauthor of The Dead Take the A Train with Richard Kadrey. They are an award-winning game writer.
Review Quotes:
"A mournful meditation on life and death, full of psychopomp and circumstance, Khaw's latest spectral elegy, Find Me Where It Ends, has crafted the most incomparable companion, a four-legged friend to the very end, inviting readers to rub the Grim Reaper's tummy and find solace in its shadows." --Clay McLeod Chapman, author of Devil Inside
"A darkly luminous novella steeped in grief, inheritance, and the quiet seductions of oblivion. With lyric ferocity, Khaw conjures a world where love and annihilation blur, where the past clings like a wound, and where survival itself can feel like a betrayal. Unsettling, intimate, and entirely unforgettable."
--Christopher Barzak, author of Wonders of the Invisible World
