Villain hitting for vicious little nobodies : a novel / Lindsay Wong.
"From Canadian literary dynamo Lindsay Wong, horror collides with dark comedy when a young woman signs her life away in the ancient Chinese tradition of corpse marriage to pay a lifelong debt and bury a dark secret in her past. Locinda has a debt to pay -- and the clock is ticking. Desperate to outrun her mistakes and financial woes, she signs a contract with a nefarious company, Joyful Coffin & Co. Matchmaking Services, to be a bride in the Afterlife to the highest bidder. Locinda is blindfolded, drugged, and smuggled underground into the caves where her training coffin awaits. All that's left to do now is submit to her fate and renounce her past life by dying a nameless nobody. Only one problem: A fellow corpse-spouse-in-training Guanting, recognizes her on day one. He clocks her right away as the granddaughter of Baozhai, the feared and revered Villain Hitter -- a powerful witch. Though Locinda is running from her ghosts, Guanting is in need of a potent curse, and as their wedding burials loom, she's the only one who can help him. Even if it means delving into her grandmother's past life -- from Shangba, Guangzhou province, China in the 1920s to Hong Kong in the 40s -- as well as facing her own haunted past. Amid visits from unwelcome spirits, a rude awakening from her undead sister, and between curses so vicious they'd make your blood curdle, Locinda begins to learn that secrets aren't anything like a dead body -- they scream to be heard, and they refuse to stay buried. Written in prose so sharp it snaps like a whip, Villain Hitting for Vicious Little Nobodies will have you shielding your eyes from rotting corpses one moment and cackling at the sardonic wit of malicious ghosts and gods of misfortune the next. It's a masterwork in fiction that cements Lindsay Wong as one of the finest writers of literary horror of our time"-- Provided by publisher.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780735242418 (trade paperback)
- Physical Description: 375 pages ; 21 cm
- Publisher: Toronto, ON : Penguin Canada, 2026.
Search for related items by subject
| Subject: | Blessing and cursing > Fiction. Chinese > Canada > Fiction. Death > Fiction. Debt > Fiction. Poverty > Fiction. Secrecy > Fiction. Social classes > Fiction. Spirits > Fiction. Witches > Fiction. Zombies > Fiction. |
| Genre: | Zombie fiction. Witch fiction. Horror fiction. Black humor. Novels. |
Available copies
- 0 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 1 current hold with 1 total copy.
Other Formats and Editions
Show Only Available Copies
| Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Lakeshore Branch | FIC Wong | 31681010449924 | FICTIONPBK | In process | - |
- Penguin Putnam
âA suspenseful, audacious, subversive portrait of the lives of unforgettable women. In turns beautiful and gruesome, this book made me cackle aloud, and contains extraordinary depth of thought and imagination. . . . A wickedly good tale.â âShashi Bhat, author of Death by a Thousand Cuts
A young woman signs her life away in the ancient Chinese tradition of corpse marriage in this wickedly hilarious novel about class, ambition, and the burden of being an impoverished model minority.
Poor, vicious Locinda Lo is a nobody with a powerful witch for a grandmother and an undead corpse-kid-sister as her only friend. A broke MFA dropout living in?Vancouver with six roommates and zero job prospects, sheâs buried so deep in debt she might as well be six feet underâand her family is?in danger of being buried along with her.
Desperate to escape her financial woes and save her grandmother and sister, Locinda signs a contract with a nefarious company, Joyful Coffin & Co. Matchmaking Services, to be auctioned off as a corpse bride to the highest bidder.?Next thing she knows, sheâs being smuggled underground into the damp caves where her training coffin awaits.
As Locinda prepares for a rich, dying dearly beloved to claim her as his bride-to-be in the Afterlife, her past becomes twisted with that of her grandmother, Baozhai. A feared and revered Villain Hitter, or witchy curse-monger, Baozhaiâs legacy stretches from 1920s China to the Battle of Hong Kong in the 40s to New York City thereafter. Across the generational divide, one thing becomes achingly clear to them both: you canât outrun your ghosts.
Villain Hitting for Vicious Little Nobodies is a daring, genre-bending meditation on life, death, and the murderous cost of living in between. It lays bare the societal and cultural expectations placed on Chinese women and the devastating price of enduring them. This chilling masterclass in fiction cements Lindsay Wong as one of the most provocative Canadian horror writers of our time.