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  • Published: 29 September 2026
  • ISBN: 9781645662037
  • Imprint: Kensington
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 288
  • RRP: $65.00

The Twelfth House



The vengeful spirit of an unborn child draws her father from the Bight of Biafra onto a slave ship bound for the harshly colonized Caribbean island of Dominica in this lush historical novel infused with magical realism and rooted in West African mythology for readers of Ta-Nehisi Coates’ The Water Dancer and River Sing Me Home by Eleanor Shearer.

Etta is an ogbanje, an unborn soul trapped in a cycle of conception and death in the wombs of one family. A gifted siren in the twelfth house of the zodiac—the house of secrets, of dreams, and of death—her voice unleashes ethereal songs that consume listeners with fear. Her desperate desire to live compels her father, Bako, into the hands of his captors of the coast of 18th-century Benin and carries him on a harrowing journey across the Atlantic to enslavement on a sugarcane plantation in Dominica.

Bako’s defiant spirit—and Etta’s fervent wish to be born—soon lead him to escape into the mountains. There, he has a fateful encounter with the Kalinaga woman named Mary who will ensure Etta’s birth into the mortal world. But the child Etta bears physical scars of her many spiritual deaths, bringing her father to suspect the truth of his daughter’s origins. As the landowners and tradesmen who enslave Etta’s people feel her wrath and inflame rebellion, Bako fears it is the rebellion within which is the gravest.

  • Published: 29 September 2026
  • ISBN: 9781645662037
  • Imprint: Kensington
  • Format: Hardback
  • Pages: 288
  • RRP: $65.00

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Praise for The Twelfth House

Praise for Tall Is Her Body

“The deeply moving sophomore novel from de la Chevotière (We Were Not Kings) is a magical realist coming-of-age story chronicling a young man’s life in the West Indies…De la Chevotière’s fluid and atmospheric writing easily draws readers into both the lush setting of Dominica and Fidel’s inner world. Themes of identity, colonialism, and racism bolster the sprawling plot, and though the magical elements are light, they fascinate. This is sure to impress.” —Publishers Weekly on Tall Is Her Body

Tall Is Her Body is a memorable, generous, and vivid addition to a Caribbean lineage inaugurated by the likes of Kincaid, Selvon, Roumain and Lovelace. Tender and unsparing, de la Chevotière’s triumphant entrance more than meets the bill. A soaring work.” —Canisia Lubrin, acclaimed poet, editor, and author