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Cuckoo Paperback – June 11, 2024
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An instant USA Today bestseller!
A Best Book of 2024 (NPR)
From Gretchen Felker-Martin, the acclaimed author of Manhunt, comes a vicious new novel about a group of teens who must stay true to themselves while in a conversion camp from hell.
"A soaring, boundless ode to queer survival. It's flat-out mesmerizing."―Paul Tremblay, author of The Pallbearers Club
Something evil is buried deep in the desert. It wants your body. It wears your skin.
In the summer of 1995, seven queer kids abandoned by their parents at a remote conversion camp came face to face with it. They survived―but at Camp Resolution, everybody leaves a different person.
Sixteen years later, only the scarred and broken survivors of that terrible summer can put an end to the horror before it's too late.
The fate of the world depends on it.
“Tense and frighteningly visceral, Cuckoo is a masterwork of body horror thrumming with high octane viciousness.” ―Eric LaRocca, author of Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke
Also by Gretchen Felker-Martin:
Manhunt
Black Flame
- Print length352 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTor Nightfire
- Publication dateJune 11, 2024
- Dimensions9.2 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
- ISBN-101250794668
- ISBN-13978-1250794666
The chilling story of the abduction of two teenagers, their escape, and the dark secrets that, years later, bring them back to the scene of the crime. | Learn more
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Editorial Reviews
Review
A Best Book of 2024 (NPR)
"Cuckoo is, like Felker-Martin's previous novel Manhunt, absolutely masterful. It is gory and horrifying and brash. It is a parable slicked with blood and viscera. It is a condemnation of the ways the world tries to force queer people to become shadows of themselves by abandoning who they are. This book will leave you gasping and yearning, and it will stay on your mind long after you turn the last page."
―ROXANE GAY, New York Times bestselling author of The Bad Feminist
"Cuckoo is a breathtaking novel of body horror; a heartbreaking, angry, terrifying, unflinching indictment of Christian America's cruelty; and it's a soaring, boundless ode to queer survival. It's flat-out mesmerizing."
―PAUL TREMBLAY, author of The Pallbearers Club
“[An] ambitious and devastating coming-of-age tale...Laying bare grief, terror, and the tenderness that makes it all matter, this is horror at its best.”
―PUBLISHERS WEEKLY (STARRED review)
“One of the most important voices in modern horror.”
―PASTE MAGAZINE
"Cuckoo is a cry of grief and rage and, at its heart, a tribute to the queers who cup their hands around the guttering flame of hope and refuse to let it die. Brutal, relentless, terrifying, startlingly beautiful―I dare you to put this novel down.”
―CARMEN MARIA MACHADO, author of Her Body and Other Parties
"Beyond being just a really fucking good horror novel, Cuckoo is monumentally important. Felker-Martin wrote a gut-twisting banger of a book that makes fleshy the anti-trans movement."
―CHELSEA G. SUMMERS, author of A Certain Hunger
“A great work of horror.”
―NPR
“Tense and frighteningly visceral, Cuckoo is a masterwork of body horror thrumming with the high octane viciousness of a Richard Laymon novel while maintaining the literary sophistication of a piece penned by Clive Barker or Poppy Z. Brite.”
―ERIC LAROCCA, author of Things Have Gotten Worse Since We Last Spoke
“Felker-Martin’s action-packed and intricately plotted second novel fairly vibrates with rage at those who seek to harm or fail to protect queer kids…. Kaleidoscopic and precise and suitably gross.”
―BOOKLIST
“Vividly gruesome and carefully observed, Cuckoo will be splattered across the inside of your skull long after you’ve set it down. Beneath the viscera and relentless prose, a vital heart beats within.”
―ANDREW F. SULLIVAN, author of The Marigold
"An instantly absorbing battle cry. Felker-Martin nests seamless psychic links with Lisa Tuttle and Stephen King, forming her unique nightmarish bear trap and fighting it with sustained, justified rage. Through all of Cuckoo's visceral brutality, it's the moments of kindness and bravery that broke my heart."
―HAILEY PIPER, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Queen of Teeth
"A queer conversion camp thriller that is truly terrifying to read. Felker-Martin writes with sensitivity and righteous fury about the many torments the teenage characters are forced to endure in the name of heteronormativity."
―CRIMEREADS
"Cuckoo is vile, repulsive, putrid, and utterly without restraint―a relentless assault on the senses. I devoured every word, and they devoured me. Filthy, degenerate art at its finest."
―HIRON ENNES, author of Leech
"This vivid, unsettling, character-rich novel grabs you by the throat and won't let go."
―LUCY A. SNYDER, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of Sister, Maiden, Monster
"With her newest book, Felker-Martin appoints herself the new High Priestess of splatter. Cuckoo serves up frantic action, cosmic body horror, and a level of profane, lusty carnage that would put a fundie in intensive care. And at the center of it all is a story of love, hate, and sacrifice that spares no suffering, but takes no pity. Bring tissues and a raincoat."
―TONY TULATHIMUTTE, author of Private Citizens
"Cuckoo is a nest of guts so red and inviting you'll find yourself slurping out of it like pasta before you know what's in your mouth. No other author can make the beautiful so grotesque, nor the grotesque so beautiful."
―MEG ELISON, author of Number One Fan
“I’ve been waiting impatiently for Felker-Martin’s next book since the millisecond I put down Manhunt and I wasn’t disappointed. Cuckoo is equal parts intensely tender and turbulently gross. Well-observed, enthrallingly paced, and downright brutal exactly where it needs to be.”
―MATTIE LUBCHANSKY, author of Boys Weekend
"Cuckoo is the gory, gooey, visceral horror story our present moment demands. It's an exploration of survival and loss in the teeth of interlocking material systems of violence like transphobia, homophobia, and racism. And it's also a radically queer homage to―or reimagining of!―some much-beloved genre classics, like Invasion of the Body Snatchers."
―LEE MANDELO, author of Summer Sons
"Burning with rage and sick as hell in the best way, Cuckoo is only further evidence that Felker-Martin is one of the best horror novelists working today. All hail the queen of body horror!"
―MAX BOOTH III, author of Abnormal Statistics
"Visceral, vivid, intense, and intensely memorable, Cuckoo is a remarkable and beautiful story of horror and queer justice."
―RYAN NORTH, author of Dinosaur Comics
"Felker Martin is a master of building tension, and of illustrating the horrors that play out all around queer and trans people every day. Cuckoo is required reading for any thriller fan."
―AUBREY GORDON, Your Fat Friend
"Cuckoo is brutal, confrontational, and gory, yet every page is informed by deep compassion. A compressed epic of oppression, revenge, and solidarity."
―NABEN RUTHNUM, author of Helpmeet
"With its wonderfully drawn cast of characters, Cuckoo deftly slips beneath your skin and squeezes your heart before violently erupting into something rotten and razor-toothed. A ferocious read, and an incredible follow-up to Manhunt."
―TREVOR HENDERSON, author of Scarewaves
"Felker-Martin's Cuckoo is as grotesque as it should be, but the weakness the monster exploits is human longing, human empathy, human love. The monster haunts our protagonists for decades through their yearning to see each other and be seen, a yearning which transcends their brokenness. I am more haunted by this book’s beauty and generosity than by the titular monster and its faceless vessels."
―MAYA DEANE, author of Wrath Goddess Sing
Praise for Manhunt:
#1 Best Book of 2022 (Vulture) • A Best Horror Novel of All Time (Cosmopolitan) • One of the Best Horror Novels of 2022 (Esquire, Library Journal, Paste, and CrimeReads) • A Top 10 Horror Debuts of 2022 (Booklist) • A Goodreads Choice Award nominee for Best Horror • A Best Book of 2022 (Tor.com) • A Best SFF Book of 2022 (Gizmodo)
About the Author
Product details
- Publisher : Tor Nightfire (June 11, 2024)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 352 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1250794668
- ISBN-13 : 978-1250794666
- Item Weight : 2.31 pounds
- Dimensions : 9.2 x 0.9 x 8.5 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #129,922 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #53 in LGBTQ+ Horror Fiction (Books)
- #6,073 in Horror Literature & Fiction
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Gretchen Felker-Martin is a horror author and film critic living in Massachusetts.
Customer reviews
Customer Reviews, including Product Star Ratings help customers to learn more about the product and decide whether it is the right product for them.
To calculate the overall star rating and percentage breakdown by star, we don’t use a simple average. Instead, our system considers things like how recent a review is and if the reviewer bought the item on Amazon. It also analyzed reviews to verify trustworthiness.
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Cuckoo Is Demented, Fun, Gruesome and Monstrous!
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 7, 2025My fave read of 2024. I saved the best for last. Gretchen is brilliant and I will read anything she writes.
- Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2024I want to preface this review by saying I thoroughly enjoyed the author's other novel 'Manhunt'.. so I was excited to read this one as well. There were fun ideas throughout but also times where I almost gave up on it entirely.
The good:
- The way the novel started caught my attention and made me excited for the rest of the story.
- The diversity of the main characters and their interactions with one another.
- Certain details and aspects regarding the horror elements were vivid and intriguing.
Where it lost me:
- The amount of characters led to me not understanding who was being referenced throughout the entire book.. there were times I had no idea who a character was and trying to remember.
- The constant usage of backstories that would suddenly switch in the middle of sentences and thoughts.. I didn't know if something was happening in the current timeline or not.
- The over describing of certain aspects at times were unnecessary and drawn out, leading to me skipping entire paragraphs at a time.
- The vocabulary was certainly a choice.. it's like the author was studying for the SATS at the same time as writing this novel. I'm an avid reader since childhood and just found it tedious.
- The story as a whole - not every book needs a nice tidy wrapped up ending but I feel like there was no how or why to any of it?
'Cuckoo' ultimately had a unique premise but didn't quite measure up for me.
- Reviewed in the United States on January 8, 2025I have often wondered what happens at “correctional camps” - I think the author has opened the veil of such repulsive concepts with a story here that captures the good and bad of otherness. Great characters who are all detailed and flawed and so worth knowing - this was a great read.
- Reviewed in the United States on February 28, 2025If "but I'm a cheerleader" , "Holes", and "the Thing" had a love child. Amazing book, amazing author.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 17, 2024This isn't a "nice" or "easy" book. It's hard, dark, and vicious to the characters, with vivid descriptions of the things the characters face, much of which real Queer people will be able to relate to. It tackles things like body dysmorphia, dysphoria and eating disorders, sexual abuse and domestic violence on top of the horror elements. There are a few sex scenes that weren't particularly detailed scattered among the 352 pages, though I'm surprised some find them so objectionable while so few complain about the sometimes vivid, graphic descriptions of gore and violence.
This was a compelling read AND listen, and I very much enjoyed it. I do recommend that you set a timer while listening, however, as you may find yourself deeply engrossed only to realize six hours have passed while you worked on a craft project. I stood up and my body's Check Engine light came on as it screamed at me for not eating, drinking, or using the necessary during the entire time.
I've seen other reviews compare this story to both "Camp Damascus" by Chuck Tingle and Stephen King's "IT", and I think that should be perceived as praise, since both of these books are fantastic comparisons that touch on similar themes.
This book is NOT derivative. There's maybe a little of homage to IT, but its resemblance to Camp Damascus seems more coincidental, as both books were covering the same vague topic and written within the same approximate time span.
Camp Damascus definitely tackles some of the same plot points in a vague way, with Queer teens forced to attend a conversion camp and the otherworldly horrors they have to face while there or in the direct aftermath, but the actual events of the story are vastly different.
The comparison to IT also resonates, with a group of young people being forced to confront something horrible and otherworldly, and there being two primary timelines, one where they're young, and one where they're adults, but again, they're merely similar in the vague synopsis rather than the content of the story (though there is one moment that seems to be a direct reference.)
As I said, this isn't an EASY book, but it is a GOOD book, and an IMPORTANT. The characters feel very real and distinct from each other, and I see myself and my little group of misfit Queer friends from the late 90s and early 2000s in some of the dynamics and characters. That doesn't mean they're all good characters. They're realistic, so nobody's perfect.
Many of the things that happen to these characters in their conversion camp nightmare before all the supernatural elements STILL happen to real people, every day around the world. There are real camps that really DO a lot of the horrible things done to these kids and young adults, both conversion camps for Queer kids, and "reform" camps for misbehaving kids.
Much like some real Queer people, there's a lot of self hate and lashing out at others about the things we hate most about ourselves, with the trauma we experienced growing up in a world that hates us and wants us gone, that would happily offer us up on a silver platter to the horror in the desert.
- Reviewed in the United States on September 23, 2024Cuckoo by Gretchen Felker-Martin is a very dark horror about a group of queer kids whose parents send to a conversion camp. There, they are tormented by a religious group who run the camp to try and "fix" them. And if that evil wasn't enough, there's something else haunting them.
This was such an amazing story and really starts off with a bang! There was so much going on that was twisted and cringey, and I felt like I was holding my breath through the entire story. There are some really hard scenes to read, so please check triggers. The entire story felt like a fever dream, and I really enjoyed it. It's in multiple povs. I love the diverse group of the queer cast represented.
I listened to this one on audiobook, and I would very much recommend it. It had a multicast narration that brought the characters to life.
- Reviewed in the United States on August 7, 2024This book is horror, but it is less scary and more gory. I don't want to say "gross-out" bc I don't want anyone to think I am alluding that gay sex scenes are "gross", but the sex scenes are VERY numerous and VERY graphic. This includes sex scenes WITH the monsters. Wasn't for me.