A fableistic, "beautifully crafted, poetic" debut novel of 
enormous power and grace about a sister trying to hold back her brother 
from the edge of the abyss for readers of Jesmyn Ward and Tommy Orange (The New York Times Book Review).
 
In
 the tourist town of Ciudad de Tres Hermanas, in the aftermath of their 
mother's passing, two siblings spend a final weekend together in their 
childhood home. Seeing her brother, Rafa, careening toward a place of no
 return, Rufina devises a bet: if they can make enough money performing 
for privileged tourists in the plaza over the course of the weekend to 
afford a plane ticket out, Rafa must commit to living. If not, Rufina 
will make her peace with Rafa's own plan for the future, however 
terrifying it may be.
As the siblings reckon with generational 
and ancestral trauma, set against the indignities of present-day 
prejudice, other strange hauntings begin to stalk these pages: their 
mother's ghost kicks her heels against the walls; Rufina's vanished 
child creeps into her arms at night; and above all this, watching over 
the siblings, a genderless, flea-bitten angel remains hell-bent on 
saving what can be saved.