In the heart of rural Illinois, shrouded in mist and ancient secrets, stands a house unlike any other, home to the Elliott family. These are not your ordinary Midwesterners; they are the world's ghouls, its ghosts, its invisible boys and Egyptian mummies, its vampires and witches, all bound by shared experience and a unique brand of love. This house, almost a sentient entity itself, cradles their peculiarities and whispers their long histories, especially as the grand Homecoming for All-Hallows Eve draws near.
Young Timothy, a ten-year-old boy, finds himself an anomaly among them. He is human, mortal, a fact that sets him apart in this gathering of the eternally strange, yet he is their cherished chronicler, the one who will remember and tell their tales. He often seeks out A Thousand Times Great Grandmère Nef, an ancient mummy from Egyptian sands, who, with a drop of ancient wine, begins to unfurl the epic of their lineage and the very genesis of their mysterious home.
As the night of Homecoming arrives, family members converge from every corner of the world, arriving as wolves, bats, or even rustling leaves, filling the house with a joyous, macabre energy. Timothy, despite his joy, feels the pang of his mortality, an "illness" in the eyes of some, but he finds solace and wonder in their company. He soars through the night sky with Uncle Einar, a green-winged being who, despite a past collision with a telephone pole that grounded him from safe night flights, still finds new ways to embrace the vastness above, sometimes disguised as a giant kite for his mortal children.
Among the family is Cecy, the dreamer, whose consciousness can detach and wander into the forms of others - animals, plants, even human girls. In one such journey, she inhabits the body of a human girl named Ann Leary, seeking to experience love with a mortal boy, Tom. Yet, the bittersweet truth of her vicarious existence means true connection remains just beyond her grasp, a phantom limb of affection. Then there is Angelina Marguerite, who ages backward, a beautiful woman unearthed from her grave only to embark on a journey that will see her grow ever younger until she is reborn anew. Her kiss leaves Timothy with a stirring of new, profound feelings.
But not all returns are welcome. John the Unjust, a malevolent relative, appears, denied shelter and threatening to expose the family's existence to the human world unless Cecy uses her unique powers to soothe his tormented mind. The modern world, with its disbelief and encroaching normalcy, presents a growing threat, a "figment war" against the fantastic. More relatives arrive, fleeing persecution, prompting a family council to strategize their survival in a world that increasingly denies their very existence.
The House itself, a living, breathing entity, seems to stretch and breathe with them, protecting their secrets and coddling their delicate natures. Yet, an underlying sense of melancholy pervades, for even among the immortal, change is inevitable, and the world outside is slowly forgetting how to believe in magic. The Elliotts, a family assembled more by shared otherness than by blood, must find new ways to belong, to continue their ancient dance between the horrific and the heartfelt, in a world that threatens to leave them as mere dust returned to dust.