About
Erika T. Wurth’s novel WHITE HORSE is a New York Times editors pick, a Good Morning America buzz pick, and an Indie Next, Target book of the Month, and BOTM Pick. She is both a Kenyon and Sewanee fellow, has published in The Kenyon Review, Buzzfeed, and The Writer’s Chronicle, and is a narrative artist for the Meow Wolf Denver installation. She is an urban Native of Apache/Chickasaw/Cherokee descent. She is represented by Rebecca Friedman for books, and Dana Spector for film. She lives in Denver with her partner, step-kids and two incredibly fluffy dogs.
Featured Work
White Horse
White Horse is an Indigenous literary horror novel about urban Indian Kari who loves heavy-metal and horror (specifically Megadeth and Stephen King) but despises the mother she thinks abandoned her when she was only two days old. When her sweet, well intentioned white cousin Debby finds an ancient bracelet that had belonged to Kari's mother, when Kari touches it, her mother's ghost began to haunt her. Then an evil Bigfoot begins invading her dreams--and then her reality. And she decides she has to find out what happened to her mother after all.