Praise for Eat the Ones You Love:A book that dwells in the real and unreal, that has weirdness and darkness but humour and heart too. It's weird, yes - how could a book about a talking plant not be - but so at home in its weirdness that the world seems more magical when you put the book down.-Sunday TimesGorgeously written and incredibly atmospheric, this very Irish horror story is a brilliant exploration of desire, fear and belonging.-Irish TimesDeliciously strange, delightfully wicked... Griffin thrives in the liminal space between genres, throwing out roots and blooming in weird and wonderful ways.-V.E. SchwabIt's been an excellent few years for gothic novels, and Eat the Ones You Love is among the best I've read. It's certainly the most fun. Gorgeous, bewitching, full of heart and secrets and smarts, it kept me up late and turned my dreams strange.-Kelly Link, bestselling author of The Book of LoveThis murdery plant is my number one problematic fave. Eat The Ones You Love is intricate, unusual, and unlike anything you've read before. An eccentric, deeply sensual, and artistically sure-footed exploration of toxicity in many forms. I devoured it.-Olivie Blake, New York Times bestselling author of The Atlas SixSarah Maria Griffin is an artist of the rarest kind: genuine, vulnerable, funny, tragic and wise.-Sarah Rees Brennan, New York Times bestselling author of Long Live EvilEat The Ones You Love is a masterpiece inventive, intimate, and so incisive on the way class shapes human relationships. Griffin's voice is absolutely singular; scalpel-sharp and deeply lyrical, every word unexpected and yet precise. Simply put, this book redefines the literary horror genre. Fans of Paul Tremblay and T. Kingfisher have found their new obsession.-Laura Steven, award-winning author of The Society of Soulless GirlsEat the Ones You Love is a beautiful, dark gem of a book. Sarah Maria Griffin writes with acute attention to the intersection between class and relationships, and the all-consuming effects of possession.-Zoraida CÛrdova, USA Today bestselling author of The Inheritance of OrquÌdea DivinaEat the Ones You Love is a visceral experience akin to stepping into a lush greenhouse and feeling your skin come alive, blood warm and tingling, as spring green vines brush your cheeks whispering promises of hunger. Decadent, heartfelt, delicious, dark, broken, sweet, and horrifying, this book is a journey of verdant, blooming love and creeping terror not to be missed.-Delilah S. Dawson, New York Times-bestselling author of Bloom and GuillotineThis poignant and original examination of desire and decay is a stunner.-Publishers Weekly, starred reviewThe ultimate complex relationship story, this horrific tale is infused with humor and wit via Griffin's prose... Fans of John Wiswell's Someone You Can Build a Nest In should pick this up.-Library Journal, starred reviewSarah Maria Griffin's prose is intoxicatingly verdant - I found myself dying to get back to reading any time life forced me to put it down. Griffin's voice holds your hand through the pages with compelling surety. It's a palpable, skilfully executed horror where you can't see the florist for the trees until it's too late. This one lingers and I loved it.-Courtney Smyth, author of The UndetectablesI devoured this book in a matter of days, but it will be snaking through my mind for a long time to come.-Adrienne Celt, author of End of the World HouseEat the Ones You Love is a story that has everything: monsters, malls, and minimum wage. Griffin is a genius of suburban gothic, and like Baby, I'm always hungry for more.-Caroline O'Donoghue, bestselling author of The Rachel IncidentSarah Maria Griffin has cultivated something rare and precious, a tale that hums with love and menace in prose so stunning it will take your breath away. With Griffin's signature flair for beauty and complexity, this layered and immersive story of what binds and breaks us will wind it's way around your heart and sometimes stop it Deirdre Sullivan, author of Wise CreaturesFull of lush, visceral prose that brings all of your senses to life, it's a supremely satisfying read, equal parts unsettling and enthralling.-Kel Menton, Irish Sunday Independent