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Book: “Nowhere Burning” by Catriona Ward
Publishing Info: Tor Nightfire, February 2026
Where Did I Get This Book: I received an eARC from NetGalley
Where You Can Get This Book: WorldCat.org | Amazon | Indiebound
Book Description: Set in the unforgiving maw of the Rocky Mountains, Nowhere Burning is the latest harrowing novel from bestselling author Catriona Ward, perfect for fans of Riley Sager and the hit series Yellowjackets.
A refuge for lost children may also be their prison.
In the middle of the night, Riley pulls her younger brother Oliver out of bed, and the two run away from home. Riley is intent on joining a group of teenagers squatting in the abandoned ruins of an infamous movie star’s ranch, Nowhere. For actor Leaf Winham, Nowhere was a place to hide from his fame, and to hide his crimes―until a fire ravaged his home and exposed him as a murderer.
It is rumored that the ranch nestled in the peaks of the Rocky Mountains is now home to group of feral children, a place where adults cannot enter, and Riley hopes to find a new family there. But the Nowhere Kids are fierce in defending their turf and their clan, and Riley quickly realizes that while she and Oliver may have left the devil they knew, this group is a new type of diabolical.
For something dark lives in the burned shell of Nowhere, something which asks a terrible price for sanctuary…
Review: Thank you to NetGalley for providing me with an eARC of this novel!
I haven’t every been super into “Peter Pan”. I watched the Disney movie as a kid (though I’m not sure I’d show it to my own kid these days), and enjoyed the Mary Martin version that we had on video cassette and has apparently been kind of forgotten by post-Millennial generations (when I saw a random video about how NOVEL and UNKNOWN this movie was I felt my bones turn to dust), but it was never a favorite of mine. But I do like the idea of reimagining classic tales as horror stories. “Nowhere Burning” by Catriona Ward is a horror story that takes some “Peter Pan” themes and changes it into something weird, unique, and unnerving.
I always love the vibes of a cult themed horror novel, and this one feels like it mixes some Branch Davidian lore with a “Children of the Corn” feel to it to make something weird and creepy as hell. I also enjoyed the “Peter Pan” allusions, with children fending for themselves feeling like they will never grow up after following vague ‘second star to the right’ directions into the Rockies. We follow a few different threads and narratives, which are unclear in how they line up at first. The most prominent one is Riley, a desperate teenage girl who escapes with her younger brother from an abusive situation, looking for solitude and thinking she’s found it with the kids at Nowhere. We also have a documentarian who is hoping to get some answers about Nowhere and the history and notoriety, as well as an architect who was hired on by Leaf Winham, the original owner of Nowhere who went on to commit the unspeakable, and who falls into a complex and obsessive web. Riley’s was, for me, the most interesting, seeing her slowly realize that perhaps she and Oliver aren’t super safe with the Nowhere Kids as things become weirder and weirder and more and more danger becomes apparent, though I will say that once we do figure out where the timeline falls for all the narratives it made them all pretty interesting.
And the “Peter Pan” references were pretty enjoyable. It’s not like The Rockies are what I imagine when I think of ‘Neverland’, but the way that Ward creates a symbol of freedom and feralness within the mountains that is very in line with the idea of The Lost Boys wasn’t lost on me. From alligators named Tinkerbell to many exits out of windows to ‘flying’ thanks to ziplines in the wilderness. There are even more meta references to Peter Pan adjacent mythos, specifically how much notorious filmmaker Leaf Williams mirrors Michael Jackson, with his eccentricities, his isolated and sprawling ranch, and some of the details within the ranch (such as a ferris wheel) clearly making reference to the now deceased and controversial King of Pop. I love a reference, and seeing the details sprinkled throughout the narratives was very, very fun for me.
“Nowhere Burning” is a solid horror novel that will surely satisfy horror fans who like a “Peter Pan” homage.
Rating 7: A strange and unnerving homage to “Peter Pan” that brings Neverland to an unforgiving Rockies, “Nowhere” is a weird and entertaining cult horror tale.
Reader’s Advisory:
“Nowhere Burning” is included on the Goodreads list “2026 Women in Horror”.













