From the publisher: Book club fiction at its finest as Kathleen Rodgers' novel reaches new heights, and hopefully new audiences, in this marvelous story of a group of girls in northeast New Mexico. Here is regional fiction aspiring for a broader market!
Out 9.16.25 from University of New Mexico Press
The Llano County Mermaid Club walks the line between mystery and literary fiction as a woman returns to her hometown seeking to figure out what really led to her best friend’s tragic and mysterious end.
Published by University of New Mexico Press, and distributed by Simon & Schuster.
Growing up in the desert town of Sandhill, New Mexico, Marigold Hubbard and her friends wanted only one thing: to see the ocean. The community pool and the nearby Santa Rosa Blue Hole are the closest they can get, and they dream of mermaids while swimming these rare waters. When Marigold learns of the affair between her father and the mother of her best friend, Melody Calloway, the betrayal tears the girls apart. Unmoored from both friends and family, Melody meets a tragic and mysterious end on the shores of the Blue Hole, leaving Marigold no chance to ever reconcile the friendship.
Forty years later, Marigold returns to Sandhill to care for her elderly father, but an envelope of old letters and a cryptic message in an abandoned church leads her on a quest to find answers about what really happened to Melody. Threading between past and present, Marigold must piece together the tragic chain of events that led to Melody’s death, pursuing questions that may have no easy answers.
llano, an open grassy plain with few trees
♫ The somber strains of her flute echo through the empty window frames of the abandoned church.
photo of Kathleen by Tom Rodgers
photo taken Sept. 2019
The opening chapter takes place in this abandoned church in eastern New Mexico.
My baby sis, Jo Rivera, is a champion of my writing. She cross-stitched the “landlocked mermaids” — a theme in the new novel.
The public library plays an important role in the story. I grew up climbing the steps to this building that once housed the US Post Office and later the Clovis-Carver Public Library. A church meets here now, but the building lives on as a library in the novel.
The girls discuss the novel at one of their club meetings in an abandoned church in the early 70s.