Strange Lights
Parenting is never easy, but it’s a hell of a lot harder when your toddler is a chupacabra.
Paranormal investigator and cryptozoologist Reggie has embraced her fate as parent to an adopted toddler, Eldi—a blood-sucking chupacabra with a fondness for goats. Reggie wants nothing more than to put her complicated past in the rearview mirror and fade into as much obscurity as her toddler will allow. But a rash of UFOs in the night sky and a couple of crop-circle-carving Roombas force Reggie into an investigation that attracts the attention of an old enemy, an anti-supernatural agency hunting for creatures like Eldi. To outwit them, Reggie must team up with Calvin: a podcaster-turned-werewolf whose charm is a real threat to Reggie’s rule against romantic attachments.
With Reggie’s history quickly catching up to her and Eldi in the agency’s crosshairs, any shred of normalcy evaporates. Reggie must decide: Can she confront her dark past to save Eldi—and an entire alien species—from getting wiped out of the universe?
For fans of The Hitchhiker’s Guide to the Galaxy and Kevin Wilson’s Nothing to See Here, Strange Lights is a joyride in a sentient Winnebago with a quirky cast of cryptids.
Additional information
| Genre | Action/Adventure, Fantasy, General Fiction, Humor/Satire, LGBTQ+, Mystery/Crime, Romance, Science Fiction |
|---|---|
| Age | Adult |
| Publisher | Independent |
| Imprint | Bindery Books: Ezeekat Press |
| Language(s) | English |
| Format(s) | eBook, Trade paperback |
| Author | Mira Gonzalez |
| Release Date | 06 October 2026 |
| Release Month | October Releases |
| Author Identity | BIPOC, LGBTQIA+ |
| Content Rep | LGBTQIA+ |
About the Author
Mira González is a full-time chaos manager of three small humans and the author of Strange Lights. You can find her escaping into novels when she isn’t traveling. Mira currently resides in Fiji, but she grew up in the Rocky Mountains of Colorado and worked on oil rigs under the northern lights in Alaska.
Equal parts personal experience and a wildly overactive imagination inspire her stories, which center the queer and diverse characters she relates most to. Though her children are the inspiration for the monster toddler in her book, her husband is regrettably not a werewolf, and she can only dream of a sentient Winnebago.
