For Tony Sandoval, life begins with the smell of a summer monsoon in El Paso. In 1984, his world is the cramped but magical kingdom of apartment #75, a place he shares with his artistic older brother, Gabriel, and his chaotic baby brother, Tuttilo. When a joyous afternoon playing in the rain leads to a humiliating confrontation, Tony's protective mother, Elena, vows to find her family a new home-a place where her sons won't be made to feel ashamed for being children.
In a new house on a quiet cul-de-sac, Tony forges an unbreakable bond with two other boys, Richard Villalva and Randy Conner.
A forgotten piece of advice from his brother-"You gotta give the ghosts a name" -sparks a last, desperate act: Tony begins to write. This private exorcism transforms him from a dishwasher into a celebrated author known as "El Cucuy". But after the ghosts of his past are finally quieted, he faces a new crisis: the silence of a blank page and the fear that he has lost the voice his community is now counting on.
Spanning forty years in the heart of the U.S.-Mexico border, El Cucuy is a sweeping coming-of-age story about the brutal cost of a secret and the redemptive power of giving a name to the ghosts that haunt us. It is a novel about the voiceless, the invisible, and the enduring search for home in a city of phantoms.