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Loba

Price range: £5.99 through £9.99

She’s not the first lighthouse keeper to lose her mind on the shores of Cabo Polonio, but she’s determined to be the first to survive it.

Delmira Torres knows fleeing to Brazil is the only way she’ll be free of her abusive husband. But to get there she’ll need money; it’s why she takes a posting at a lighthouse in Cabo Polonio, Uruguay, a small town where time doesn’t seem to move quite right.

There, she has only a month until her husband and her secrets catch up to her. But the position comes marred by the legend of La Loba, who stalks the lighthouse and the nearby fishing village, and by the spiraling visions that begin to plague Delmira.

A century earlier, Amalia arrives at the same lighthouse. Held captive and desperate to escape her dire situation, her story may hold the answers to Delmira’s torment.

Both of them, desperate for freedom and determined to survive, must find a way to outlive the horrors of Cabo Polonio.

File under: The Ocean Calls | You Don’t Belong Here | Legends and Lobos | Feminine Rage

“As haunting as a sea lion’s call, Loba is filled with jagged edges and viciously sharp teeth. Valentina Cano Repetto has expertly crafted a haunting atmosphere full of ancient lore and drowning darkness. Loba lures you in with its vivid prose and emotionally charged mystery. It swept me away from the very first chapter – gripping me with its icy fingers until I had no choice but to be swallowed by the sea.”

– Grace Morrow, author of We Become Darkness

 

Loba is a yell of defiance against generational trauma, violence, and misogyny. Twisty and atmospheric, this cathartic horror will captivate you with townsfolk who know too much, lost treasure, a haunted lighthouse, and otherworldly sea lions.”

– Eli Snow, author of The Divine Gardener’s Handbook

 

Loba is a haunting, feverish gothic horror that sinks its teeth into questions of womanhood and survival. Set against the windswept isolation of a Uruguayan lighthouse, amid the eerie cries of sea lions and the weight of local legend, it conjures visceral dread, an unforgettable sense of place, and two narrators whose unraveling keeps every page charged with uncertainty. Weaving together history and horror with remarkable skill, it is a deeply humane novel about what women endure, what they inherit, and the fierce courage required to imagine another future.”

–  A.T. Rainach, author of The Art of Living Forever