'A book I will return to time and time again' MEGAN BONTRAGER
'Perfectly captures the dark heart of girlhood' JEN JULIAN
'[A] wonderfully chilling and entirely immersive feminist horror story' Publishers Weekly
She's a cautionary tale told by mothers to their young children, 'Come back before it gets dark.'She's a warning to lecherous young men, 'Don't wander the streets late at night.'
A man's body is found viciously murdered behind a neighbourhood's 24-hour corner store, sending shockwaves through the small, tightknit community. All anyone wants is to make sense of this brutal crime and move on with their lives.
But all seven-year-old Layla wants is a pet donkey. To her, a donkey is the epitome of freedom and being self-sufficient - to think for herself, go anywhere by herself and live an independent life.
The killings continue and rumours start to fly of supposed hoofprints and a woman with hair like black silk. As the ambiguous messages in lipstick and sweet smell of perfume at the crime scenes causes the men to suspect the women around them, Layla's world unravels. She grows into the type of woman she has always dreamed of becoming.
A woman with sharp instincts. A woman who cannot be tamed.
Read MoreQuotah paints us a world that feels ripe for the taking, much like the flowers that make up Layla's perfumes, but also foreign and warped. The work done here is complex, heartfelt, and painful at times. This is a book that I will return to time and time again, particularly when the world feels vibrant and violent.The Night Is Not for You is a fierce coming of age novel unlike any I've read before. Steeped in dread and a wild, aromatic atmosphere, this story is a shapeshifter-from murder mystery to folktale to family drama and back again. Through this mutability, Eman Quotah perfectly captures the dark heart of girlhood, the fear of what lurks in the night, and the thrill of lurking there yourself.[A] wonderfully chilling and entirely immersive feminist horror story . . . The characters are well drawn, the suspense is taut, and a great final twist proves very fun. There's a lot here to sink one's teeth into. - Publishers Weekly (starred review)Fans of protagonists breaking bad and horror that reads like fractured fairy tales will enjoy following Quotah's narrative down its shadowed alleys. - Library Journal