Publisher's Synopsis
Juniper Lane, Alabama, 1963: a town where summers once buzzed with jukebox tunes and barefoot freedom, now hums with a darker current. Beneath pastel-painted bungalows and sagging willows, an electrified wire fence coils around Cal Rutherford's life, marking the boundary of a community turned prison. The lane's widows-June with her biscuits, Ruby with her stares, Faye and Dottie with their quiet menace-rule this fading Eden, their smiles hiding a grip as old as the six graves dotting the earth. Cal, scarred by the hub's relentless pull, feels the weight of their watch and the town's buried past. Defiance stirs in him, a pencil stub his weapon against their suffocating order, as he dares to challenge the hum that binds them all.
But the widows' hunger runs deeper than Cal knows, threading nostalgia with dread in a Southern Gothic tapestry of lost innocence. The hub's electric song grows louder, a pulse that echoes through Juniper's haze, hinting at secrets older than the '60s glow. Miles Hawthorne's debut novel weaves suspense and atmosphere into a haunting portrait of resistance-where memory battles control, and freedom's cost is etched in shadow. From Canada's quiet corners, Hawthorne conjures a South both tender and terrifying, inviting readers into a tale that lingers like a half-remembered tune. Will Cal shatter the lane's spell, or become its next silent echo? Echoes of Willowmere is a chilling, evocative journey for fans of gothic suspense and historical whispers.