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LIKE WATER ON STONE

The emotional impact these events had on individuals will certainly resonate, but understanding the conflict at large may...

This verse novel uses alternating narrators to document three siblings’ flight from the 1915 Armenian genocide.

The Donabedian family’s Christian faith makes them a target of the Ottoman Empire’s genocide. When violence erupts, the parents barely manage to create a diversion that allows three of their children to escape to the mountains. With meager food supplies and only vague directions on how to reach safety, the children’s courage is tested. But unexpected sources provide help, most notably Ardziv, an eagle who both occasionally provides scavenged food and narrates events from his aerial perspective. This device does help illuminate the broad scale of the government’s brutality, but Ardziv also complicates the question of the author’s intended audience. While the novel’s graphic violence lends itself to more mature readers, they may view the eagle’s narration and assistance with skepticism. The verse is often powerful, especially in its use of repetition, but it does not provide the author with much textual opportunity to fully explain the nature of the ethnic and religious conflict. From a design perspective, it’s unfortunate that the information provided on the opening map reveals that the siblings survive and make it to New York, which may diminish the novel’s tension for many readers.

The emotional impact these events had on individuals will certainly resonate, but understanding the conflict at large may still require supplemental reading. (Historical fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: Nov. 11, 2014

ISBN: 978-0-385-74397-6

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: Sept. 2, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Oct. 1, 2014

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DIG

Heavily meditative, this strange and heart-wrenching tale is stunningly original.

An estranged family’s tragic story is incrementally revealed in this deeply surreal novel.

Alternating narration among five teens, many of them unnamed but for monikers like The Freak, The Shoveler, and CanIHelpYou?, as well as an older married couple, Gottfried and Marla, and the younger of two violent and troubling brothers, an expansive net is cast. An unwieldy list of the cast featured in each part melds well with the frenetic style of this experimental work but does little to actually clarify how they fit together; the first half, at least, is markedly confusing. However, readers able to relax into the chaos will be richly rewarded as the strands eventually weave together. The bitingly sardonic voice of The Freak, who seems to be able to move through space and time, contrasts well with the understated, almost deadpan observations of The Shoveler, and the quiet decency of Malcolm and the angry snark of CanIHelpYou?, who is falling for her biracial (half white, half black) best friend, are distinctly different from Loretta’s odd and sexually frank musings. Family abuse and neglect and disordered substance use are part of the lives of many of the characters here, but it’s made clear that, at the root, this white family has been poisoned by virulent racism.

Heavily meditative, this strange and heart-wrenching tale is stunningly original. (Fiction. 14-adult)

Pub Date: March 26, 2019

ISBN: 978-1-101-99491-7

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Dutton

Review Posted Online: Dec. 8, 2018

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 1, 2019

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THE SHADOW SISTER

A gripping portrait of fractured sisterhood, reverberating traumas, and the triumphs of omniscient ancestors.

A biracial high school student questions the truth surrounding her sister’s disappearance and unexplained return.

Sixteen-year-old Cassandra “Casey” Cureton despises her older sister, Sutton. The girls have a White mom and Black dad, and unlike her sister, Casey keeps her hair natural. She prefers the company of best friend Ruth, who is Black, and her online music fandom community. Dedicated cheer captain, flat-iron enthusiast, and rising senior Sutton is a mean girl with a convincingly sweet public persona. When Sutton goes missing on their last day of classes, their parents rally their affluent suburban Seattle-area community to band together and bring Sutton home. Weeks later, she is found physically unharmed but unable to remember anything. While her parents adjust to Sutton’s bittersweet homecoming, Casey realizes there’s something deeply unnerving about the sister who has returned—and it has nothing to do with her amnesia. As Casey races to unmask Sutton’s secrets, she discovers how her paternal family legacy protected Sutton, shedding new light on the powerful bonds of blood. Debut author Meade offers an intriguing, emotionally resonant novel wrapped in supernatural realism. Guided by layered themes of generational inheritance, Black identity, and the reclamation of history, the first-person narrative is told through Casey’s point of view with flashbacks from Sutton. Twists abound, but readers may crave a fuller ending than the action-packed but quick resolution.

A gripping portrait of fractured sisterhood, reverberating traumas, and the triumphs of omniscient ancestors. (author’s note) (Speculative fiction. 14-18)

Pub Date: June 27, 2023

ISBN: 9781728264479

Page Count: 338

Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire

Review Posted Online: April 11, 2023

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 1, 2023

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