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Nowhere Burning

Not yet published
Expected 24 Feb 26
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Nowhere Burning is a harrowing tale of survival that places the dark fairy tale of Peter Pan and the ruthless dangers of Lord of the Flies into the unforgiving maw of the Colorado Rockies.

"Gripping and beautiful, haunting and virtuously crafted…you won’t be able to stop reading."—Virginia Feito, author of Victorian Psycho

Secrets in the flames. Answers in the ashes.

Riley and her brother Oliver set off in the pitch-black night, fleeing their troubled home. They are heading for Nowhere—an abandoned ranch, once the playground of its former eccentric movie-star owner, now a haven for runaways.

What awaits could be the freedom they crave.

But this mysterious clan guards dark secrets, and the scorched grounds hold the ghosts of the past. Riley quickly realizes that while she and Oliver may have escaped the devil they knew, something darker lurks in the burnt shell of Nowhere.

Something which asks a terrible price for sanctuary…

Also by Catriona
Looking Glass Sound
Sundial
Little Eve
The Last House on Needless Street

At the Publisher's request, this title is being sold without Digital Rights Management Software (DRM) applied.

Kindle Edition

Expected publication February 24, 2026

31 people are currently reading
14792 people want to read

About the author

Catriona Ward

29 books5,360 followers
CATRIONA WARD was born in Washington, DC and grew up in the United States, Kenya, Madagascar, Yemen, and Morocco. She read English at St Edmund Hall, Oxford and is a graduate of the Creative Writing MA at the University of East Anglia. Her forthcoming novel, Nowhere Burning, will be published by Tor Nightfire in the US and Viper Books in the UK this year. `Her last book, Looking Glass Sound, was a USA Today bestseller. Her fourth novel, the gothic thriller Sundial (2022 - Viper, Tor Nightfire) was Observer Thriller of the Month and a USA Today, CNN and Apple Books selection for best new fiction. Stephen King called Sundial ‘Authentically terrifying…. Do not miss this book.’

Ward’s third breakout novel The Last House on Needless Street (2021 - Viper, Tor Nightfire) won the August Derleth Prize and has been shortlisted for the Kitschies, the British Book Awards, the South Bank Award, and the World Fantasy Award. Esquire magazine listed it as one of the top 25 best horror novels of all time. Rights have been sold in twenty-nine territories, it was a Richard and Judy Book Club selection, a Times Book of the Month, Observer Book of the Month, March Editor’s Pick on Radio 4’s Open Book, a Between the Covers BBC2 book club selection and a Sunday Times bestseller. The Last House on Needless Street is being developed for film by Andy Serkis and Jonathan Cavendish’s production company, The Imaginarium. Stephen King said of The Last House on Needless Street, ‘I was blown away. It's a true nerve-shredder that keeps its mind-blowing secrets to the very end. Haven't read anything this exciting since GONE GIRL.’

Ward’s second novel Little Eve (2018 - W&N, Tor Nightfire) won the 2019 Shirley Jackson Award, the August Derleth Prize at the British Fantasy Awards and was a Guardian best book of 2018. Nightfire published Little Eve for the first time in the US in 2022. Ward’s debut Rawblood (2015 - W&N, Sourcebooks) also won the 2016 August Derleth, making her the only woman to have won the prize three times. Her short stories have appeared in numerous anthologies and have been shortlisted for various prizes. She lives in London and Devon.

Her short story, The African Painted Dog, is part of The End of The World as We Know It, Tales from The Stand. Introduced by Stephen King, this anthology is the first time authors have been permitted to write in Stephen King;'s universe.

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Displaying 1 - 30 of 103 reviews
Profile Image for The Belladonna.
187 reviews83 followers
November 19, 2025
“I'm never afraid. But this place scares me.”

How much would you sacrifice for sanctuary?

Nowhere Burning is due for release on February 24, 2026.

Ward delivers a psychological horror-mystery with a gothic feel and a heavy dose of suspense. There is a lingering dread that creates an unsettling yet intriguing atmosphere. It has a fragmented narrative, so it's not a breezy read, it requires focus and attention.

Nestled within the unforgiving depths of the Rocky Mountains lies Nowhere, a burnt-down, abandoned ranch that became a refuge for runaways and children in need. The story begins with siblings Riley and Oliver, who escape their devilish guardian in the wee hours of the night to find Nowhere. But did they flee a devil just to find themselves in hell? The ranch has a dark history, including its previous owner, movie star Leaf Winham, who claimed he built “Nowhere House” as an escape from his life of fame. Or was it because of something more sinister? Nowhere is full of secrets, and its history goes back even further. This eerie mind-bender was an interesting read for my first Catriona Ward book. It reveals twists at the end you never saw coming!

“You have the right hunger. The cold place deep inside you. No one survives here without those things.”

A big Thank You to Netgalley and Tor Publishing Group for gifting me this advanced copy. It was an absolute pleasure to read and review this book.
Profile Image for megs_bookrack.
2,156 reviews14.1k followers
December 25, 2025
**4.5-stars**

Nowhere Burning is a dark, melancholic novel set deep in the wilds of the Rocky Mountains.

Although told via three main perspectives, the perspective that kicks off our tale, and really serves as the heart of the story, is that of Riley, a young girl, who saves herself and her brother from the clutches of their abusive Uncle's home.

Running away in the middle of the night, Riley has one plan in mind, to join a group of unhomed teens squatting on the abandoned grounds of a infamous movie star's ranch, aptly named, Nowhere.



I don't want to mention the other two perspectives, as the Publisher's Synopsis leaves them out, therefore I don't want to be accidentally giving things away.

Just know this story is much more complex and nuanced than the synopsis may lead you to believe. One of the most interesting aspects of this novel, in my opinion, was trying to figure out how all three were going to ultimately connect.

Initially it seems Nowhere is the only connection, but is that actually true?



This novel is quite stark and gritty. It feels bleak, the tone of which reminded me a bit of the 2010 movie, Winter Bone. It's also a very slow burn, that sneaks up on you emotionally.

I didn't realize how much it had captured me until the very end. I begrudgingly admit this book made me cry actual tears and they seemed to come out of nowhere.



I was shocked at the emotion Ward was able to draw out of me. It was like a punch in the gut. I feel like the way she pulled everything together, it was just beautifully done. It was hard to not feel emotion and empathy for this set of characters that life seemed to be so unkind to.

The world isn't always an easy place, but beauty, hope and love can often be found even on the darkest of days. This story felt like moving through a deep, unending fog, but it's worth the darkness; it's worth the trudge.



I would recommend this to Readers who like a dark, emotional slow burn. It feels very Literary Horror, with plenty of dark subject matter to really sink your teeth into. For fans of Ward, this is a must read.

Thank you to the publisher, Tor Nightfire, for providing me with a copy to read and review. I feel like this one is going to stick in my mind for a long time to come!
Profile Image for Nilufer Ozmekik.
3,119 reviews60.6k followers
November 18, 2025
How can I possibly resist a Catriona Ward book—especially when I know I’m about to be shaken to my core, physically and mentally? She never fails to disturb, devastate, and utterly mesmerize me. This time, she gifts us a twistedly clever yet heartbreakingly emotional reimagining of Peter Pan—one that trades Neverland for Nowhere and blends multiple POVs and timelines into a haunting, puzzle-like narrative. As past and present collide, the full, horrifying—and profoundly sad—picture emerges piece by piece.

This story affected me far more deeply than I expected, especially the unbreakable bond between Riley and her little brother, Oliver (or “Olive,” as she lovingly calls him). Their shared tragedies, survival instincts, and desperate trust in each other broke my heart. Ward layers the book with stunning symbolism: a crocodile named Tinkerball; a one-legged documentary filmmaker reminiscent of Hook; “flying” children gliding on zip lines; and a Nowhere Land where abused children form their own eerie new world. It’s a dark, brilliant homage to Peter Pan, transformed into something far more sinister—a cult led by the legendary filmmaker Leaf Winham, who slit his followers’ throats and allegedly committed grotesque acts on his secret island before his suicide. Even after his death, the horror lingers in his charred estate, complete with a Ferris wheel (a chilling metaphor possibly nodding to a real-life pop icon accused of child abuse).

The execution is flawless—each chapter a perfectly tuned note in a symphony of dread and sorrow. We first meet young Riley, a girl battling real-life demons to protect Oliver after their mentally unstable mother’s death. Sent to live with a cruel cousin who starves and locks them away, Riley’s only hope arrives in the form of Noon, a mysterious girl who invites her to escape to Nowhere. Following cryptic clues into the night, the siblings risk everything—mountain lions, starvation, and perhaps worse—to find this promised refuge.

Parallel to their story, we meet Marc and Kimble, documentary filmmakers investigating the legend of Nowhere. They interview survivors who were once abducted by Nowhere’s “children,” desperate to learn how to reach the hidden land. Their search leads them to Linus, an ex-firefighter and the sole survivor of Leaf Winham’s massacre. Traumatized yet tempted by money, Linus agrees to guide them back to the cursed site he swore never to see again.

And then there’s Adam—a brilliant architect whose life unravels when he learns his girlfriend is pregnant. When Leaf Winham offers him a job designing and renovating his estate, Adam accepts, drawn in by both the challenge and Leaf’s intoxicating charisma. What begins as curiosity soon becomes obsession, testing Adam’s morals and sanity in devastating ways.

As the timelines intertwine, Ward masterfully brings every thread together in a breathtaking finale that left me misty-eyed. The final chapter, in particular, hit me like a quiet heartbreak after a thunderstorm—both devastating and strangely beautiful.

Ward’s darkly twisted Peter Pan worked for me on every level—disturbing, emotional, and impossibly creative. I didn’t expect to love it this much, but it may just be my new favorite of her works.

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

Many thanks to NetGalley and Tor Publishing Group / Tor Nightfire for the ARC of this mind-blowing horror-thriller. And deepest thanks to Catriona Ward for her brilliant, fearless imagination—this book is pure, haunting genius.

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Profile Image for Erin.
3,053 reviews374 followers
November 14, 2025
ARC for review. To be published February 24, 2026.

3 stars

So, in this one, Ward has three, possibly four different stories going on in only 226 pages. They do manage to weakly fuse together at the end, but some better than others and by jamming so much into such a short book it feels like at least one of the stories (Marc and Kimble) gets short shrift. And another of the stories is way too much like something I’ve read before.

Overall, though, I liked the pacing and I enjoyed some of the characters quite a bit. If you are a fan of Ward, this is more of what you already like from her.
Profile Image for Ghoul Von Horror.
1,099 reviews430 followers
November 16, 2025
To think I only had to sell my soul to get this arc 🫶🏻. - - - - - >Review below<- - - - -



TW/CW: Language, physical abuse, death of parents, death by suicide, mental illness, trauma, depression, drinking, smoking, blood, violence, death of animal (bird), cancer, miscarriages, child abandonment, child abuse, murder, death of children

*****SPOILERS*****
About the book:
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...
Release Date: February 24th, 2026
Genre: Horror/Thriller
Pages: 304
Rating: ⭐⭐⭐⭐⭐

What I Liked:
1. Always the writing style
2. The characters are so complex but interesting too
3. Everything comes full circle
4. Omg the ending 😭

What I Didn't Like:
1. Repeating people's names; Oliver Olive/Marky Mark
2. Felt like at times too many povs
3. Timelines just change without notice in mid-paragraph

Overall Thoughts:
{{Disclaimer: I write my review as I read}}

So the girl goes on a 3 day adventure to Riley's town to get new food? There are no other towns along the way for the kids to steal food from.

Linus deciding to trust these strangers to actually pay him. They mention that they will sign a contract but it isn't mentioned so far if they did and Linus will be getting $10,000 for him showing them where the location is. I'm even more shocked that others haven't offered to pay him before to go up there and why is he so persuaded to talk to Marc and Kimble.

Oh my gosh now we have a POV from Adam. I'm really trying grasp all the different characters added in plus the timelines changing in the middle of their povs in the middle of the book without any notice. If you're not really paying attention or you put the book down a lot it can get confusing. I read on my breaks at work and at home so I found myself having to refresh mentally who we were to talking about and what timeline we're in.

How is Riley not freaking out when Cal mentions that his brother is missing and then Oliver comes over and says that Riley killed a demon? Cal mentions that he's going to go out everyday to find his brother on this trail and eventually he's going to come across this body of his brother and put two and two together when she says she killed a demon. Honestly, I'd be getting out of here. She has no idea what these kids are capable of.

Adam being calm about the fact that there is a closet full of different men's clothing that smells like different men would frighten me so much. It's odd. I don't know why Adam is staying. At some point Adam has to have some common sense. So far Leaf has said he wanted these things;
A. Rooms with windows for him to see in to watch people
B. Secret areas built into the walls
Those plus he has the clothing from other men. Wake up Adam!

Also was curious because Cal mentions that his brother Danny has disappeared and he thinks he went out to the woods to go on the trail. So how do they get the winch back to them on the other side? Because Danny would have had to use the zip line to go up. Also it's mentioned that somebody has to turn the handle as you go up. If Danny was by himself going up the zip line how was he able to turn the winch to get up if he was in the basket?

Kimble picks up a burger that's meat but she's vegan and eats it and goes to bed. Yeah right! You see it's going to be crapping her pants all night from that meat. There's just no way she can eat meat and it wouldn't mess up her stomach.

On top there are the remains of animals. A gleaming green spike pierces the body of some bird, a blackbird perhaps. It has been impaled. There are others. A rat, a possum, a rabbit, a blue jay – dried-out old remains.

How did a rabbit get up there? It's the top of a fence they cannot jump that high. I've owned rabbits and they can't climb like that.

I wish that Riley would listen to Oliver. She's so worried about him saying something about the demon she misses the other stuff he says. He mentions that Hattie says the real demon is growing up.

I love how Adam is being turned into this person that just ignores the obvious either for love or the fact that he is being manipulated into not seeing what is right in front of him. The sounds in the house, Leaf not having luggage, and now a 13th grave where there was only 12.

Riley should have left when she had the chance and even more so when her brother was starting to get acclimated to everybody. She knew that they wouldn't hurt the kids but she knew she was on thin ice so why wouldn't she have just left? It drives me crazy that she stayed and then even begins a relationship with the brother. I know Riley is still young so she isn't thinking past day to day but she had to have known at some point Cal would find the remains of Danny.

Why did I not realize that Riley was Adam's child? Wonder what happened to Oliver's father.

So I'm really not shocked that all of Oliver would vote to have her killed or whatever they're going to do she has not been the kindest to him. I really believe she does not like children. She's just treating the same way that the cousin was. Plus he doesn't understand what's really happening - he's just going along with the group.

Noon tells Riley that the little children are actually dead and were killed by Leaf. I'm also really not sure what that means. So then I was confused why they were kissing hands toward the house when Noon said before that it was harmless for everyone to worship Leaf since most of them don't remember Leaf. I guess in the same breath she even said that most of them worship the land for giving them somewhere safe to live. Really just confused on these children though. Noon does say that she took them from under the house where they were buried and that it took them a year to pull the bodies out so they could bury them again. They all wear the bones of the children around their necks too so they can see them and be accepted by them.

We jump back in time to when the owners of the land lived there at Nowhere house. Jane goes to a knitting circle but then they jump into talking about crocheting. I'm not sure if this a mistake of the arc I have or a mistake of print but knitting and crocheting are different.

Okay so Jane really had 5 kids and that is where the kids came from. Her husband killed her and the kids. The towns people buried them in the fruit cellar so the other towns people wouldn't judge mountain people. I am absolutely shocked at that Jane had kids and hid them from people. I do wish there was more of explanation of what happened and why. It's such a huge part of the story that skims over the why. I suppose the mountain is toxic to people and they end up killing one another.

I can't believe that Riley started a fire like her father did to get away. Now she is sending Oliver off on his own while she stays with the kids and becomes their mother after catching everyone else on fire. Wild!

Excuse me Oliver is Marc... And he's been in a different time line looking for Riley to save his daughter with a kidney replacement. Well I definitely missed that one. Plus Marc/Oliver is the Lilac boy too.

God, this ending of their reunion is sad. Riley being sure the kids are real and Marc saying they are not gives doubts to readers. He says the children were real and Riley burned them in the fire. Riley keeps saying you gave to have the bones around your necks to see them and that's why Mark can't but if you remember Riley and Oliver both were seeing them fir a while begire they got the bone necklace.

Riley finally agrees the give the kidney to his daughter. And then she's gone to back home. I really thought she was going to stay with Oliver but maybe she finally saw he didn't need her anymore and that the "kids" at home were the ones she needed.

It was all just so sad though.

Final Thoughts:
This book is something special. It takes you for a ride and you have no idea where you are going with it. I thought we were getting a simple retelling of Peter Pan and Lord of the Flies, but this is so much more than that. There are jems inside this book that are so unique.

I love Catriona Wards writing style and the way she makes characters feel so fever dream. With every chapter I was itching to go to the next. I had to know what was happening.

I do think there were some answers I must have missed or were never given.
A. When Riley started the fire why would no one come put it out?
B. Did Oliver loose his baby teeth
C. What happened to Cousin when he was dead and why did no one come looking for the kids? Riley was enrolled in school and they knew they were in custody of them.
D. If Riley knows she's the only one taking care of the kids why wouldn't she find others to help because one day she would die and they'd be all alone again?
E. I understand why people never climbed over the fence but why did people never cut a hold through the fence then?
F. If Riley was the only grown up in Nowhere after the others were dead and in Marc's timeline how did she manage to carry Annie when she thought she was passed out?

The thing that drove me up the wall was that something important happened but we kind of skimmed over the why someone did that and why it happened. There was very little follow up to the actions of certain people. We just moved on from that. I wish there was more to the ideas and actions of the characters. It almost at times made certain parts feel unfinished.

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Thanks to Netgalley and Tor Nightfire for this advanced copy of the book (ebook & physical). All thoughts and opinions are my own
Profile Image for Cali.
21 reviews
Want to read
April 10, 2025
NEW CATRIONA WARD? IN THE ROCKY MOUNTAINS? “FOR FANS OF YELLOWJACKETS??????”
ARE YOU KIDDING ME???
Profile Image for Summer.
580 reviews402 followers
November 17, 2025
Nowhere Burning is an atmospheric and deliciously strange work of horror with Children of the Corn vibes. Written in Catriona’s trademark brisk writing style with short sentences which are hard to pull off but Catriona always makes it work.

Like her prior works, Nowhere Burning is sprinkled with the odious and repellent but also includes poignant themes of family, and community. The book reads like a film and kept me on my toes guessing what would happen next. The multiple perspectives that come together at the end, made for a memorable conclusion.

I did wish that there were more details as to what motivated certain characters' actions and also I wanted the characters to have more depth but overall I really enjoyed Nowhere Burning and I would recommend it. Nowhere Burning is my fifth read by Catriona Ward and I can see fans of her prior works as well as horror readers loving this one!

Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward will be available on February 24, 2026. Many thanks to Tor and NetGalley for the gifted copy!
Profile Image for Dennis.
1,078 reviews2,053 followers
November 26, 2025
3.5 stars

Catriona Ward has become an auto-read author for me, so I was very excited to read that she is returning with her 2026 horror novel, NOWHERE BURNING. I mean, the cover alone is incredibly dark and inviting! Thanks @tornightfire for my gifted copy!

Catriona Ward returns with a feral, heartbreaking reimagining of Peter Pan that trades whimsy for dread and wonder for ruin. She threads together fractured timelines, cult-like mythmaking, and a haunting sibling bond that feels as fragile as it is fierce. Riley and little Oliver anchor the story with their desperate love and shared trauma, escaping "Cousin", a brutal man who takes advantage of their misfortune. The two of them run to the reclusive Nowhere where runaway children have banded together at the ruins of an infamous movie star, Leaf Winham's ranch. Riley and Oliver believe they can live with this group until they see that these other children have may been more than they bargained for. Across parallel storylines, are documentarians chasing the legend of Nowhere and see if they can find any of the children to gather more information.

This story was confusing bookstafam, but overall I liked it. It's not as dark as I was expecting, but the comparison to Yellowjackets is spot on. Think Yellowjackets meets F'd up Peter Pan. That being said, the ending was spectacular and unexpected. It's definitely slower-paced and similar vibes to Looking Glass Sound. I miss Ward's The Last House of Needless Street and Sundial vibes, but this book was still a fun experience. Less horror and more dark coming of age, but I would still categorize it in a darker tone and voice. If you like Ward's previous books, especially Looking Glass Sound, you'll enjoy this one.
Profile Image for Adrian Dooley.
506 reviews156 followers
October 11, 2025
Riley and her younger brother Oliver are orphans and after living in care for a short while move in with their only living relative Cousin. However he makes their life a hell, drilling religion into them and abusing them.

Riley decides that she has to get her younger brother Oliver away from Cousin before he kills one or both of them.
As they escape they discover the old ruins of a ranch of an old film star, Nowhere. Now a haven for kids that have run away from bad situations and not accessible by adults, Riley thinks she has finally found a place of salvation for her and Oliver but as Nowhere’s secrets are slowly revealed, both current and past, she realises she may have led them into more than she bargained for.

Another utterly interesting and off kilter story from Ward. She’s kind of like the David Lynch of the literary world. Her stories are always set in reality but reality always feels slightly skewed and off kilter. Good versus evil a plenty with interesting and odd characters, nowhere itself is a character as is nature and everything really seems to have a personality.

A slow burn story told from three different viewpoints in different timelines, they all come together in the end beautifully and in a way I did not see coming.
There’s a lot going on here and a lot left open to interpretation. I did find myself a little confused on more than one occasion but, having read previous books from Ward I knew the writing style and just hung on for the ride.

A truly original writer with her own style, once you are used to the worlds and stories she creates the more you will enjoy her unique narrative and storytelling.

Many thanks to the publisher for the ARC through Netgalley.
Profile Image for Rachel Martin.
483 reviews
November 14, 2025
Finally adding my finished thoughts.

This was so cinematic. So atmospheric. I could envision every description crystal clear. Moreso, I could even feel the creepiness. I mean...kids in the horror genre is guaranteed to be extra creepy! This has multiple POV's and they just come together flawlessly.

Nowhere Burning is described to be for fans of Riley Sager and Yellowjackets; I don't know if I agree with the Sager comparison and I haven't seen the latter so I can't speak to those. BUT! I couldn't help but picture a bit of Lord of the Flies meets Peter Pan meets Children of the Corn (like I said, kids in horror = automatically creepy).

Catriona Ward has proven time and time again to be a master of the slow burn, but she always delivers a punch at the end. The setting of the Rocky Mountains and inspiration taken from the idea of an abandoned Michael Jackson's Neverland Ranch is just...idk, I didn't know I needed that combination but I'm happy it exists!

I got to see Catriona in a horror panel--I was internally screaming with excitement at the opportunity to read this then and I'm screaming with excitement for everyone to be able to read another brilliant Catriona Ward book. Thank you to CALIBA for enjoying one of the greatest perks of being a bookseller!
Profile Image for Lotte van Dam.
6 reviews
July 10, 2025
Eeeee, I can't wait! Catriona is always able to capture me in her stories, wrapping the world she spun around me like a little scary blanket ♡
Profile Image for James.
384 reviews26 followers
October 20, 2025
*whispering* What the fuck?

There is a place for lost and damaged children, somewhere called Nowhere, constructed by a famous actor and deeply disturbed individual, Leaf Winham, who died in the fire that consumed his house and exposed his crimes. Riley and Oliver are the newest strays adopted into the community that has sprung up in the ashes of Winham's legacy, but they wonder if Nowhere is really the haven they're seeking as the community's practices are revealed.

I admire Catriona Ward's dedication to thinking up the most bizarre and disturbing forms of child abuse to feature in her books, because I'm lowkey impressed every time. Anyways, this was awesome and just captured this vibe...it's kind of hard to explain. Maybe the obvious comparison is Lord of the Flies or Yellowjackets, but I was actually reminded more of Into the Wild (Call of the Wild is actually explicitly referenced in the book). There's this sense of characters being drawn into something much wilder and older than themselves and it's just chilling. I also think stylistically Ward's writing always feels very honest to me–or maybe raw, but I think that descriptor is overused–in the sense that you as the reader are right up against the characters. There's no feeling of a big gap between you and their experience, which I find a lot in horror and litfic.

Pretty much my only issues is that I'm not sure all of the threads came together as cleanly as I would have liked, which is in part my fault as a reader. I'd like to come back to this book and really comb through it, but as. it is I think it's difficult to appreciate all the intricacy and depth that's clearly going on here, so it wasn't perfectly satisfying.

Thank you to Catriona Ward and Tor Nightfire for this ARC in exchange for my full, honest review!

Happy reading!
Profile Image for Heathers_readss.
855 reviews169 followers
December 1, 2025
Catriona definitely has a unique writing style, short sentences that pack a punch with rivers of unspoken subtext.

No where burning follows the lives of two siblings who decide to run away in the middle of the night to an abandoned ranch previously belonging to a movie star, where other teenagers are taking refuge. Think Peter Pan took a dark turn. The siblings quickly realize that they may have left one horrific situation and landed themselves in an even worse one. This place reeks of danger and the lawless chaos is likely to be far more deadly.

If you are a fan of the author, youll definitely enjoy her latest book.

Thank you for the gifted copy, all opinions are my own.
Profile Image for Kaitlyn Barrett.
476 reviews6 followers
November 29, 2025
I enjoyed my time reading this and felt like I flew through it whenever I was reading but there’s something about most of Ward’s books that always feels a little too confusing while reading. This is my fourth book by her and 3 of them felt like something was off/convoluted. I will still continue to read her books that sound interesting to me though because I feel like they’re always unique.
109 reviews
Want to read
July 2, 2025
What wonderful news! I am so excited! I can't wait for Ms. Ward's next work! She is a delightful writer!
Profile Image for Bee.
58 reviews22 followers
Want to read
August 13, 2025
Ahhh!!! I cannot wait to get lost in this!! It sounds deliciously dark and thrilling!!
Profile Image for Kayleigh Marie.
52 reviews13 followers
October 19, 2025
You ever read a book that you genuinely want to love and has a cool ass concept but you force yourself to finish it HOPING the end delivers but instead just pisses you off even more?

Very grateful for the ARC but the writing was choppy and kinda all over the place, the entire thing didn’t truly ever come together (some parts did, other parts didn’t), the characters all lacked depth, and there was so much unnecessary sub plots that just didn’t need to exist.
Profile Image for rachel x.
861 reviews94 followers
Want to read
March 9, 2025
"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."
Profile Image for Stacy40pages.
2,197 reviews162 followers
November 22, 2025
Nowhere Burning by Catriona Ward. Thanks to @tornightfire for the gifted Arc ⭐️⭐️⭐️

Two siblings escape in the night to seek asylum at the rumored Nowhere, an abandoned ranch full of children runaways.

This definitely had the twists and somewhat bizarre, but certainly compelling, plot that Ward is known for. If you enjoy her past books, you’ll love this one as well. I liked the idea of Nowhere, as well as the children and their personalities. It reminded me of Neverland meets Lord of the Flies. There were some moments that were slow to me, but it picked up and all the pieces came together in the end.

“Urban legends tell us who we are, and what we fear.”

Nowhere Burning comes out 2/24.
Profile Image for Cayla.
1,464 reviews317 followers
November 25, 2025
Thank You Tor Nightfire for the ARC Copy for review. This horror fiction story was definitely a crazy one. It was kinda confusing at times to follow along just because multiple things were happening throughout the book. The characters were interesting too but didnt feel a true connection with them like I was hoping. Catriona def has a unique style of writing her books so if you enjoy her work, I think you will be a fan of this one.
Profile Image for Azhar.
377 reviews35 followers
November 3, 2025
this was just okay ?? like it definitely could’ve been creepier with more dread, more tension, but it kinda fumbles with it, fades into an almost lame ending.

won’t be screaming that this is the best book of 2026.



thanking netgalley & publishers for an early reading copy in exchange for my review.
Profile Image for EmmaReadsCrime.
435 reviews63 followers
Read
October 8, 2025
DNF around the 50% mark.

I really loved the sound of this and thought it would be perfect for spooky season! Catriona Ward is an author I have been desperate to read for ages!

I DNF’d this around the 50% mark. I just couldn’t vibe with the writing style at all. It’s extremely slow burn and I found myself confused at times. I also found that the story has too many POVs.

I’m absolutely devastated as I wanted to love this!
Profile Image for Patrick Fassnacht.
176 reviews5 followers
December 10, 2025
Fans of Catriona Ward will not be disappointed.
Nowhere Burning continues her telltale style and skill at layering a menagerie of moving and previously-seeming disconnected pieces. A ton is happening here. The rapid-fire Points of View changes keep the pages turning, the characters twisting, turning, and screaming their way through the macabre Peter Pan-esque overlay, the chronology-flopping confusions, and the big revealing Ward Wow... buttoning it all up nicely.

None of the calculating storylines misfired. None of the carefully-threaded backgrounds fell flat. The jolting Reveal that not one single person anywhere would have come anywhere close to putting together was not as farfetched as many these days are becoming. Too many bandwagoneers... becoming formulaic and kitschily-stale in this genre. Not the case here, again, by Ward.

Somehow, she tossed the proverbial Kitchen Sink into the babies' bathwaters... and.., or.. um, was it that they were being tossed out?? bathwater and all, instead? The Sink was... actually a tiled room? morgue? with self-draining floors? That character's offspring was these guys' mom? and actually overlapped on this timeline, with that one? Or, was it that group's Dad, with his neighborhood friends' secret lending of stuff.. who morphed into That One Guy? You know, from the movies? That veered off into Creeper these days?

Oh, hell, I give up. Just turn the pages.
She'll stop manipulating the overdone weaving-- crocheting?-- of strings... and, on paper, it'll make good sense. And, I'm sure to feel the Feels somewhere along the way.
ok, whew, I am Now Here.
Done.

Thank you, NetGalley and ThePublishing Group for the ARC. Much appreciated.
Fans, new and old, will mostly love this one too.
Profile Image for Alishia Baker.
Author 1 book35 followers
December 24, 2025
Nowhere Burning was an auto read for me because I love Catriona Ward. I’m a little conflicted, though. Some parts felt incredibly slow, while others weren’t as fully fleshed out as I’d hoped. That said, it still kept me guessing until about the 70% mark (and yes, I was right), which tells me the thriller aspect absolutely worked.

The Peter Pan nostalgia was strong, very intentional and very vivid, and I loved that. I’m a sucker for anything Peter Pan adjacent, so the themes and atmosphere really landed for me. The imagery was good enough to clearly picture everything, and I appreciated the overall arc from beginning to end.

Despite my nitpicks, this was still a solid, engaging read. If you enjoy thrillers with eerie nostalgia and emotional twists, definitely check it out, and special thank you to NetGalley.
Profile Image for Nash Bridges.
188 reviews15 followers
November 25, 2025
"Nowhere....Now Here?"

It starts off slow as you dive into the lives of Riley and Oliver who are under the rule of there abusive cousin....

They run away to a mythical place called "Nowhere" (mythical as to why ...you'll understand later...)

As always, you think you have Ward figured out and AGAIN she turns an absolute 360....that's one ending I NEVER saw coming

Thank you TorFire for sending this to me. Sorry it took so long. I am a bookseller and it's been crazy as the holidays are coming
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