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The Labyrinth of Souls

Illustrated by Abigail Larson
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Hardcover
$18.99 US
5.75"W x 8.5"H x 1.06"D   | 14 oz | 12 per carton
On sale Feb 11, 2025 | 336 Pages | 9780593699119
Age 8-12 years | Grades 3-7
Reading Level: Lexile 750L

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"Your next favorite book featuring a magical school is here. Get this one for young readers in your life who want their stories full of action, adventure, fantasy, and mystery." —Lora Senf, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of the Blight Harbor books

A darkly inventive fantasy for fans of Tim Burton about a girl who can see Nightmare creatures from the forbidden Labyrinth of Souls.


In the Kingdom of Spinar, there are seven rules for safeguarding your soul from the Sorrows and Nightmare creatures—most importantly: never, ever enter the Labyrinth of Souls.

Ix Tatterfall has always been an outcast with big secrets: She can cross into the Labyrinth, home to the powerful Sorrows, and she can see strange Nightmare beasts when no one else can. Some, like the shadowy Inklings or bothersome Stubbed Toads, are merely a nuisance. Many more—like the Jimber-Jawed Hounds—are dangerous. Even deadly.

But something is very wrong in the Labyrinth. A terrible new Nightmare—a raggedy scarecrow called Jack—has been ravaging the misty maze, gobbling up wraiths and lost souls and allowing Nightmares to seep into the Waking World.

On one forbidden trip, Ix comes face to face with Jack. Worse, she’s apprehended by Candle Corps, an elite magical group that protects the kingdom against Nightmares. Instead of exile, Ix is allowed to enter the mysterious Candle Corps Academy. For the first time, she’s surrounded by others who can see what she sees: Morrigan Bea, a hot-tempered girl who might be a monster; Ollie Pembrooke, a shy boy who loves books and Dreamchaser dogs; and Hanky the Inkling, Ix’s faithful Nightmare companion. 

But more and more Nightmares are bleeding into Spinar. Raggedy Jack is on the hunt for something—someone—from the Waking World.

Ix Tatterfall herself.
"A fantasy full of intrigue, countless imaginative creatures, and instantly endearing characters." Booklist

"The otherworldly shock and magic of the Labyrinth, filled with an amusing, horrifying, and memorable array of beasts…adds a distinct and fresh take on a supernatural world." BCCB

"Full of adorable spooky creatures and more twists and turns than a hay maze, The Labyrinth of Souls is a heartwarming story about acceptance and finding your people. The perfect pairing to the fall season!" —Kalyn Josephson, New York Times bestselling author of the Ravenfall series

"Your next favorite book featuring a magical school is here. Get this one for young readers in your life who want their stories full of action, adventure, fantasy, and mystery." —Lora Senf, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of the Blight Harbor books

"An eerie, magical adventure, equal parts chilling and charming, that I already can't wait to revisit." —Rochelle Hassan, author of Nox Winters and the Midnight Wolf
Leslie Vedder is the author of The Labyrinth of Souls and The Bone Spindle series, who loves girl heroes and adventurers. She grew up on fantasy books, anime, fanfiction, and the Lord of the Rings movies, and met her true love in high school choir. She graduated from San Francisco State University with a B.A. in creative writing, and currently lives in Colorado with her wife and two spoiled house cats. View titles by Leslie Vedder
The Girl Who Sees Nightmares
They were whispering about her again.
Ix hunched into her long black coat, trying to disappear as she slipped out of the little brick schoolhouse. But there was nowhere to hide. She knew everyone in Brittlewick, and everyone knew her.
Ix Tatterfall. The girl who sees Nightmares.
“Ugh. It’s Ick,” a pretty blond girl warned her friend, sneering the nickname Ix had been stuck with since first grade. “Hurry, or the ick will rub off on you.”
The two girls pushed each other out of the schoolhouse, giggling. Ix tried to pretend she couldn’t hear them. Or at least that she didn’t care. There were worse things than getting called names.
The first rustling yellow leaves swirled around Ix as she headed for her aunt’s cottage on the edge of town. It would have been faster to take the big dirt road in the center of Brittlewick, but instead she ducked into the grackleberry bushes, then slipped through a rotted hole in the fence surrounding the overgrown garden of Whitlock Manor. When she came out, she was in an alley behind the cobbler’s shop, which sagged like a rough old boot.
Ix shook old leaves and dust off her purple-­striped shirt and black overalls. A stick poked her hand as she ran her palm across her dark hair, plaited into two twiggy braids that everyone said made her look like a raggedy scarecrow.
She knew every secret path and shortcut in Brittlewick. It helped that she wasn’t afraid of most things that other people were. The spider-­infested shed behind the school was the perfect place to read, though you had to brush away the cobwebs now and then. Ix didn’t mind the brambly ditches near the Scally Woods where the rats scampered around, either. The smell wasn’t great, but the whiskery rats were actually quite friendly. Most of all, Ix liked the dark: old abandoned buildings, and crawl spaces under the stairs, and especially the dead of night.
Because Ix Tatterfall had a secret.
Ix knelt beside a squashed pumpkin that had rolled off a cart into the alley. She could see something moving inside the broken shell, among all the gooey seeds: a tiny squiggle of black huddled into the hollow. A Nightmare creature.
Ix stretched her hand out toward an Inkling. Inklings were Nightmares, what people called all manner of creatures and maladies that escaped from the Labyrinth of Souls. But these were the harmless kind that mostly just hid in cracks and corners or under beds. They were hard to see because they blended into the dark, but if you caught one, they looked like splotches of ink with long, wiggly arms and legs. They reminded Ix of little stick bugs.
Some Nightmares weren’t so harmless. If you had a sudden dark feeling out of nowhere, or a chill ran up your spine, or you found yourself wide awake in the middle of the night, or experiencing a run of terrible luck, maybe you were just having a bad day. Or maybe you’d run afoul of a Nightmare without even knowing it.
Most people couldn’t see them, just feel their effects. But Ix was different.

About

"Your next favorite book featuring a magical school is here. Get this one for young readers in your life who want their stories full of action, adventure, fantasy, and mystery." —Lora Senf, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of the Blight Harbor books

A darkly inventive fantasy for fans of Tim Burton about a girl who can see Nightmare creatures from the forbidden Labyrinth of Souls.


In the Kingdom of Spinar, there are seven rules for safeguarding your soul from the Sorrows and Nightmare creatures—most importantly: never, ever enter the Labyrinth of Souls.

Ix Tatterfall has always been an outcast with big secrets: She can cross into the Labyrinth, home to the powerful Sorrows, and she can see strange Nightmare beasts when no one else can. Some, like the shadowy Inklings or bothersome Stubbed Toads, are merely a nuisance. Many more—like the Jimber-Jawed Hounds—are dangerous. Even deadly.

But something is very wrong in the Labyrinth. A terrible new Nightmare—a raggedy scarecrow called Jack—has been ravaging the misty maze, gobbling up wraiths and lost souls and allowing Nightmares to seep into the Waking World.

On one forbidden trip, Ix comes face to face with Jack. Worse, she’s apprehended by Candle Corps, an elite magical group that protects the kingdom against Nightmares. Instead of exile, Ix is allowed to enter the mysterious Candle Corps Academy. For the first time, she’s surrounded by others who can see what she sees: Morrigan Bea, a hot-tempered girl who might be a monster; Ollie Pembrooke, a shy boy who loves books and Dreamchaser dogs; and Hanky the Inkling, Ix’s faithful Nightmare companion. 

But more and more Nightmares are bleeding into Spinar. Raggedy Jack is on the hunt for something—someone—from the Waking World.

Ix Tatterfall herself.

Praise

"A fantasy full of intrigue, countless imaginative creatures, and instantly endearing characters." Booklist

"The otherworldly shock and magic of the Labyrinth, filled with an amusing, horrifying, and memorable array of beasts…adds a distinct and fresh take on a supernatural world." BCCB

"Full of adorable spooky creatures and more twists and turns than a hay maze, The Labyrinth of Souls is a heartwarming story about acceptance and finding your people. The perfect pairing to the fall season!" —Kalyn Josephson, New York Times bestselling author of the Ravenfall series

"Your next favorite book featuring a magical school is here. Get this one for young readers in your life who want their stories full of action, adventure, fantasy, and mystery." —Lora Senf, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of the Blight Harbor books

"An eerie, magical adventure, equal parts chilling and charming, that I already can't wait to revisit." —Rochelle Hassan, author of Nox Winters and the Midnight Wolf

Author

Leslie Vedder is the author of The Labyrinth of Souls and The Bone Spindle series, who loves girl heroes and adventurers. She grew up on fantasy books, anime, fanfiction, and the Lord of the Rings movies, and met her true love in high school choir. She graduated from San Francisco State University with a B.A. in creative writing, and currently lives in Colorado with her wife and two spoiled house cats. View titles by Leslie Vedder

Excerpt

The Girl Who Sees Nightmares
They were whispering about her again.
Ix hunched into her long black coat, trying to disappear as she slipped out of the little brick schoolhouse. But there was nowhere to hide. She knew everyone in Brittlewick, and everyone knew her.
Ix Tatterfall. The girl who sees Nightmares.
“Ugh. It’s Ick,” a pretty blond girl warned her friend, sneering the nickname Ix had been stuck with since first grade. “Hurry, or the ick will rub off on you.”
The two girls pushed each other out of the schoolhouse, giggling. Ix tried to pretend she couldn’t hear them. Or at least that she didn’t care. There were worse things than getting called names.
The first rustling yellow leaves swirled around Ix as she headed for her aunt’s cottage on the edge of town. It would have been faster to take the big dirt road in the center of Brittlewick, but instead she ducked into the grackleberry bushes, then slipped through a rotted hole in the fence surrounding the overgrown garden of Whitlock Manor. When she came out, she was in an alley behind the cobbler’s shop, which sagged like a rough old boot.
Ix shook old leaves and dust off her purple-­striped shirt and black overalls. A stick poked her hand as she ran her palm across her dark hair, plaited into two twiggy braids that everyone said made her look like a raggedy scarecrow.
She knew every secret path and shortcut in Brittlewick. It helped that she wasn’t afraid of most things that other people were. The spider-­infested shed behind the school was the perfect place to read, though you had to brush away the cobwebs now and then. Ix didn’t mind the brambly ditches near the Scally Woods where the rats scampered around, either. The smell wasn’t great, but the whiskery rats were actually quite friendly. Most of all, Ix liked the dark: old abandoned buildings, and crawl spaces under the stairs, and especially the dead of night.
Because Ix Tatterfall had a secret.
Ix knelt beside a squashed pumpkin that had rolled off a cart into the alley. She could see something moving inside the broken shell, among all the gooey seeds: a tiny squiggle of black huddled into the hollow. A Nightmare creature.
Ix stretched her hand out toward an Inkling. Inklings were Nightmares, what people called all manner of creatures and maladies that escaped from the Labyrinth of Souls. But these were the harmless kind that mostly just hid in cracks and corners or under beds. They were hard to see because they blended into the dark, but if you caught one, they looked like splotches of ink with long, wiggly arms and legs. They reminded Ix of little stick bugs.
Some Nightmares weren’t so harmless. If you had a sudden dark feeling out of nowhere, or a chill ran up your spine, or you found yourself wide awake in the middle of the night, or experiencing a run of terrible luck, maybe you were just having a bad day. Or maybe you’d run afoul of a Nightmare without even knowing it.
Most people couldn’t see them, just feel their effects. But Ix was different.