Posted in: Comics, Current News | Tagged: Agent, Ghost Key, graphic novel
S.R. Appavu Sells YA Trans Horror Graphic Novel, The Ghost Key
S.R. Appavu's debut young adult horror graphic novel is The Ghost Key, in which a trans high school senior is haunted by grief and prophesy.
Article Summary
- S.R. Appavu's debut The Ghost Key is a YA trans horror graphic novel.
- Protagonist grapples with grief and prophetic nightmares of death.
- Holiday House to publish the novel in summer 2026, deal by Azantian.
- Children's graphic novels surge, dubbed the 21st-century newsstand.
S.R. Appavu's debut young adult horror graphic novel, The Ghost Key, in which a trans high school senior haunted by grief and prophetic dreams of death after the loss of their sister must fight the ghost of their guilt and come to terms with themself to prevent the imminent tragedy in their new recurring nightmare.
Alexandra Aceves at Holiday House has acquired rights to The Ghost Key for publication in the summer of 2026. S.R. Appavu's agent, Jennifer Azantian at Azantian Literary Agency negotiated the deal. Appavu – also known as Bob Appavu – writes "My YA graphic novel is coming in 2026! I feel so lucky to have the perfect agent @JenAzantian who believed in my story, and the perfect editor @alexaace who completely understood the story's heart and knew just how to make it even better. I can't wait to share it with you!" Jen Azantian added "Ah, this one is so special. It will break your heart and then mend it right back up. Truly excellent horror."
Holiday House was the first American publishing house founded with the purpose of publishing only children's books, in 1935. Holiday House launched its first eponymous imprints, Margaret Ferguson Books and Neal Porter Books, in 2018. The iconic logo of the Holiday House little boy is by Ernest H. Shepard, the illustrator of The Wind in the Willows and the Winnie the Pooh books, from their original edition of The Reluctant Dragon by Kenneth Grahame.
The expansion of children's graphic novels is fuelling all manner of publishers extending into the comics medium. Right now, it seems like an infinite market that is being tapped into, and creating longstanding comic book readers for decades to come. It is not for nothing that kids' graphic novels in bookstores are being referred to as the newsstand of the twenty-first century.