Winner of the 2025 Ray and Pat Browne Award for the Best Edited Collection in Popular and American Culture Contributions by Kathleen Alcalá, Sarah Amira de la Garza, Sarah De Los Santos Upton, Moises Gonzales, Luisa Fernanda Grijalva-Maza, Leandra Hinojosa Hernández, Spencer R. Herrera, Brenda Selena Lara, Susana Loza, Juan Pacheco Marcial, Amanda R. Martinez, Diana Isabel Martínez, Shantel Martinez, Diego Medina, Kelly Medina-López, Cathryn J. Merla-Watson, Arturo “Velaz” Muñoz, Eric Murillo, Saul Ramirez, Roxanna Ivonne Sanchez-Avila, ire’ne lara silva, Lizzeth Tecuatl Cuaxiloa, and Bianca Tonantzin Zamora Monsters and Saints: LatIndigenous Landscapes and Spectral Storytelling is a collection of stories, poetry, art, and essays divining the contemporary intersection of Latinx and Indigenous cultures from the American Southwest, Mexico, and Central and South America. To give voice to this complicated identity, this volume investigates how cultures of ghost storytelling foreground a sense of belonging and home in people from LatIndigenous landscapes. Monsters and Saints reflects intersectional and intergenerational understandings of lived experiences, bodies, and traumas as narrated through embodied hauntings. Contributions to this anthology represent a commitment to thoughtful inquiry into the ways storytelling assigns meaning through labels like monster, saint, and ghost, particularly as these unfold in the context of global migration. For many marginalized and displaced peoples, a sense of belonging is always haunted through historical exclusion from an original homespace. This exclusion further manifests as limited bodily autonomy. By locating the concept of “home” as beyond physical constructs, the volume argues that spectral stories and storytelling practices of LatIndigeneity (re)configure affective states and spaces of being, becoming, migrating, displacing, and belonging. Monsters and Saints is a multifaceted, breakthrough anthology with neologistic signage to mark its path, an invitation from Chicano/Latino/Hispano/Mexicano communities of scholars and cultural workers to explore the dark side of Querencia and acknowledge the spectral colonial ideologies that still vex us all. -- Enrique Lamadrid ― Journal of Folklore Research Reviews This truly innovative book amasses creative and research-based writing that illustrates a connection between historical Indigenous communities and contemporary Chicanx-identified peoples. -- Rachel Valentina González-Martin, author of Quinceañera Style: Social Belonging and Latinx Consumer Identities Shantel Martinez (she/her) is a practitioner-scholar who centers storytelling and narrative practices to examine cycles of intergenerational trauma/survival in both familial and educational spaces. Kelly Medina-López (she/her) is a Piro-Manso-Tiwa Border-Indigenous scholar whose work focuses on histories, rhetorics, and storytelling practices of the US Southwest, New Mexico, and specifically Paso del Norte.