Girl in the Creek
by Wendy N. Wagner
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Pub Date Jul 15 2025 | Archive Date Jul 25 2025
Tor Publishing Group | Tor Nightfire
Description
Girl in the Creek is a pulse-pounding eco-horror about how climate change is transforming our world, perfect for fans of Jeff VanderMeer and T. Kingfisher.
Buried secrets only spread.
Erin's brother Bryan has been missing for five years.
It was as if he simply walked into the forests of the Pacific Northwest and vanished. Determined to uncover the truth, Erin heads to the foothills of Mt. Hood where Bryan was last seen alive. He isn’t the first hiker to go missing in this area, and their cases go unsolved.
When she discovers the corpse of a local woman in a creek, Erin unknowingly puts herself in the crosshairs of very powerful forces—from this world and beyond—hell-bent on keeping their secrets buried.
Advance Praise
“There's no one out there writing quite like Wendy N. Wagner. Her fiction is always the perfect combination of horror and heart. With glittering prose, an unforgettable protagonist, and too many spores to count, Girl in the Creek will haunt you and break your heart in equal measure. A fantastic achievement.”—Gwendolyn Kiste, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Haunting of Velkwood
“Wagner combines the body horror of classic King, the tension of Crichton techno-thrillers, and the nostalgic fun of creature features into a love song to the beautifully terrifying grandeur of the Pacific Northwest. Both a critique of the modern true crime landscape and a deep contemplation of humanity’s environmental devastation.”—Maria Dong, author of Liar, Dreamer, Thief
"Dazzling. Girl in the Creek is unflinching eco-horror, steeped in the pitch-perfect setting of the rainswept Pacific Northwest. I devoured it even though it gutted me, and it solidifies that Wagner is an absolutely electrifying writer." — Keith Rosson
Available Editions
EDITION | Other Format |
ISBN | 9781250908643 |
PRICE | $27.99 (USD) |
PAGES | 272 |
Available on NetGalley
Featured Reviews

Awesome book! Very Different from your usual scary spooky stories. I have always preferred those horror novels with the person being possessed by an evil spirit. This book is such a good example of what I mean. Also I love the outdoors and the woods people hike and study. This even has a tunnel and cave so serious stuff. Just go ahead and read this to get into a super story you will enjoy. Love the surprise ending too. I don't like to tell in the review what the book is about except to say I enjoyed it a lot and it's scary!

In Wagner’s upcoming horror novel, we follow Erin Harper as she arrives in Faraday, Oregon, to attempt to uncover what happened to her missing brother. While looking for her brother, she instead discovers the body of a missing girl. After the girl’s body mysteriously vanishes from the morgue and more people end up dead and/or missing, it’s clear there is something more sinister going on in the town of Faraday.
I was immediately impressed by how atmospheric this read was. It does justice to the botanical horror genre by heightening the reader’s senses with the use of super descriptive writing. The contagious strange fungi described in this book seemed to seep through the pages, and I often felt myself become itchy when our characters found themselves in super uncomfortable situations. I loved these elements!
I also must commend the author on the amount of research they must have done for this book. While we were following the POV of the ‘Strangeness’ (another fantastic element to the book), the writing seemed to shift and felt more alien and beautiful.
My struggle with the book comes from the amount of characters and the unclear relationships they all shared. I struggled to keep them straight and at one point, there was an error (I believe), where a character was called by a completely different name… at least I think it was a mistake? I know I was reading an unedited ARC, so I am sure this will be corrected before release, but it still threw me for a loop. The start of the book was rough for me due to not fully understanding how everyone knew each other. While I did enjoy the ending, I felt the climax was rushed.
Overall, this was a really fun read. I was reminded heavily of Nick Cutter’s The Troop at times, so if you are looking for a similar atmospheric botanical horror with X-file vibes, I recommend adding this one to your TBR when it’s released!
Special thanks to Netgalley and Tor Publishing for the eARC of this book in exchange for my honest review!

This book was a very interesting read. The suspense was top notch and I really enjoyed the pacing. The characters felt relatable either in the sense that they seemed like me or a friend. I really enjoyed reading it.
Readers who liked this book also liked:
Vanessa Lillie; Layne Fargo; Cate Holahan; Kimberly Belle
General Fiction (Adult), Mystery & Thrillers