Hello everyone! We are so excited to announce the tour schedule for The House No One Sees by Adina King.

March 17th
Kim’s Book Reviews and Writing Aha’s – Review, Favorite Quotes
The Clever Reader – Promotional Post
March 18th
The Bookish Ren – Mood Board, Top 5 Reasons to Read The House No One Sees
March 19th
wanderingintopages – Review, Mood Board
March 20th
Boys’ Mom Reads! – Review
March 21st
Paiges & Lalypops – Review
March 23rd
The Violet West – Promotional Post

March 17th
kimbartosch – Review, Favorite Quotes
thecleverreader – Promotional Post
ablueboxfullofbooks – Creative Post
March 18th
thebookishren – Mood Board, Top 5 Reasons to Read The House No One Sees
pagesforpaige – Review
March 19th
gsreadingspree – Review
ninebookishlives – Promotional Post
March 20th
tarasbookaddiction – Promotional Post
noelles.magical.library – Review, Playlist, Promotional Post
nissa_the.bookworm – Top 5 Reasons to Read The House No One Sees
March 21st
paigesandlalypops – Revie
bookdemonio – Promotional Post
March 22nd
meghenslittlelibrary – Promotional Post
March 23rd
therearenobadbooks – Promotional Post
artxsouls – Review, Favorite Quotes


Genre: Young Adult, Poetry
Publishing date: March 18, 2025
Goodreads | Amazon | Barnes & Noble | IndieBound
Synopsis:
Penelope Ross has always felt like a passenger in her mother’s fairytale – until the night of her 17th birthday, when she is forced to enter her own. After a text from her estranged mother rips her away from a night with friends, Penny is forced into a kaleidoscope of memories locked inside the dark labyrinth of her childhood home. As Penny wanders between present and past—prose and verse—she must confront her mother’s opioid addiction to mend her fractured past. But the house is tricky. The house is impossible. It wants her to dig up the dead to escape. And as Penny walks through herself to find herself, she is not sure she has the courage to free the light she trapped inside.
Content Warning: addiction, parent drug use, bullying, food insecurity, child abuse and neglect


Adina King is veteran English teacher from Maine. Aside from teaching high school and middle school, she has worked in book stores, played roller derby, and dabbled in dogsledding. She received her MFA in writing for children and young adults from Vermont College of Fine Arts, where she studied with A.M. Jenkins, A.S. King, Shelley Tanaka, and Martha Brockenbrough. When she isn’t writing or covered in dirt from Olympic yard work, her natural habitat includes one or more of the following: roller skates, dogs, mountains, chickadees, music, and really excellent food.
