Books

Hollow Girls: Available March 15, 2024 from Cemetery Dance Publications

“Beautiful, poetic, and gutting. Hollow Girls is a captivating novel that will lure you deep into the woods where magic and darkness entwine. There is so much heart to this story of friendship and blood where oaths and secrets continue to unravel until the very last page. Bring an offering to the Fae, and come along on this memorable journey.” -Sara Tantlinger, Bram Stoker Award-winning author of The Devil’s Dreamland. 


"Hollow Girls is a witchy tale of sisterhood with a glorious strangeness reminiscent of Picnic on Hanging Rock. It is haunting and visceral in its authentic rendering of girlhood, magic, and loss. This is easily one of my favorite books of the year."  — Emily Ruth Verona, author of Midnight on Beacon Street


“If evil isn’t exorcised, where does it go? In Hollow Girls, a town curse said to be conjured by a vengeful witch calls to readers. It's only after this grim horror-fantasy sinks its spiny teeth into you and you hear the gravelly churn of fallen teeth at your feet that you realize just how f*cking terrified you are. Jessica Drake-Thomas is the most poetic orchestrator of terror I've encountered since first reading Darcy Coates.” --Haley Newlin, Cemetery Dance, and author of Not Another Sarah Halls and Take Your Turn, Teddy


 Bad Omens: Available February 17th, 2023



Bad Omens by Jessica Drake-Thomas is a seance, a collection of shadows. These poems are both plague and witch, a journey into the burning, a dance into the violent. Best enjoyed with a cup of black tea, readers will siphon the poison off these pages, kiss the death that awaits between each word. --Stephanie M. Wytovich, Bram Stoker award-winning poet of Brothel


BAD OMENS by Jessica Drake-Thomas begets a canticle of death and resurrection, a spell for love and revenge, a bellow to claw your way out of the dark and back into this world with fire in your heart. Gothic and mystical, this occult collection drips with saccharine siren songs that tear you apart and inspire righteous anger. Readers will be haunted, enticed, and moved to be true to the darkness in their hearts and ‘let the wolves loose.’
⸺ Grace R. Reynolds, author of Lady of The House

Burials—available 10/6/2020

What is buried can return. Those who are dead can still speak. A witch can be burned, but not silenced. When the abattoir is opened, the dead will rise. Burials is the narrative of those whose voices have been taken away-murdered women, witches, ghosts. It's about speaking one's truth, and using magic to heal or to banish, even from beyond the grave.

Jessica Drake-Thomas has a wealth of knowledge of things you’ve only tasted in shadows. In this collection of gothic poetry, she opens her palms to let some of these dark whispers free into the night –the freedom of a shared language etching itself into the history of the world, to become legend. As things do when they die and are buried.

If you’ve ever heard the begging of the blood moon, pulling you from slumber to tiptoe through the darkness…if you’ve ever gnashed your teeth at a lover’s neck…you will find wisps of your own darkness among these pages. 

With dark, romantic language, vengeful love spells, and the ghosts of old Salem wandering lost among the brittle paper, Burials is a haunting your soul won’t soon forget. – Mela Blust, author of Skeleton Parade

Burials is at times fierce and at others keening, but most often it is both at once. Jessica Drake-Thomas writes macabre love poems with the dazzlingly morbid whimsy of a young Morticia Addams driving her “hearse in seafoam green,” seeking her Gomez in this sad, lonely world. “I have learned that / love is cheap here, / and something is important / about the idea of // a nice girl,” she tells us. But for the witch-hearted girl, Drake-Thomas gives us love spells that offer a kind of healing for the haunted, for the many ways love so often fails us. 

Lindsay Lusby, author of Catechesis, A Postpastoral

Good writing relies as much on resonance of imagery as words, and the best writing, as is the case with Burials by Jessica Drake-Thomas, circumvents traditional connotations of imagery and imbues it with new and magical meanings.  Early in this poetry collection, Drake-Thomas establishes the images of buried women in her poem Queen of Sticks, “Meet my lover the executioner.  He kills people for his bread.”  This collection is a mass grave teeming with lovers as executioners, and the bodies left like corpses in their wake.

The cadavers are domestic and down-trodden— the house-woman” whose “mouth became a door, a large round hello for anyone to walk in.  And everyone did.”  They are true crime victims — Bella, a body confined to a Wych Elm and allows her to remember her tongue — but then asks “who listens to a pile of bones?”  They are masochistic — as the speaker of Pocketfuls pondering her love for her own love /executioner, “Aside from that maybe I do — love you like Ophelia loves the water she floats in.”

Burials is, in fact, a poetic exhumation of bodies interred, in trees, caskets and homes, used and forgotten like the still-living speaker in “White Silk Lined Coffin.” Its narrator’s breaths keep time with our own gasps as we realize she is both entombed and cognizant of the “cool black beads are slipping between your fingers and the prayers your silent lips form are only for you.”  The book is a skeletal secret whispered into the fleshy ears of the living in an eloquent elegy by Drake-Thomas to disposable bodies lifted from the hurt and the dirt with which they have too long been covered.

Kristin Garth, author of Flutter: Southern Gothic Fever Dream and Candy Cigarette: Womanchild Noir