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BURDEN FALLS

Atmospherically grapples with literal and figurative ghosts in an eerie Indiana.

A long-standing feud simmers with supernatural significance.

It’s been only a year since Madoc Miller killed Ava Thorn’s parents in a car crash, but the tensions between the two families go back generations—and now he’s taking her home. Heir to a faded fortune and a legacy of bad luck, 17-year-old Ava’s forced out of Thorn Manor when Uncle Ty sells the ancestral heap to Madoc and his family. Stuck in Burden Falls, Indiana, for her senior year, Ava is determined not to let the Miller siblings—flamboyant Freya and her older brother, Dominic, a haughty hottie—profit from her family’s tragedies and her private grief. The duo are internet-famous thanks to their phony paranormal web series, but Ava doesn’t want them to exploit Dead-Eyed Sadie, the eyeless ghost who is said to haunt Thorn Manor…and whose appearance supposedly presages death for the Thorns. Already juggling work, school, a complicated friendship, and a budding romance, Ava soon falls under suspicion for a series of deaths and disfiguring attacks. A small-town goth in a gothic tale, aspiring graphic novelist Ava is a tart-tongued, realistically rendered heroine, snarky but sympathetic—think Scooby Doo meets Veronica Mars. Maintaining her knack for spooky suspense, Ellis keeps the tension taut, delivering a gritty whodunit, a spine-tingling supernatural story, and a twisty psychological thriller all in one. Ava and the Millers are White; there is some diversity in the supporting cast.

Atmospherically grapples with literal and figurative ghosts in an eerie Indiana. (Suspense. 14-18)

Pub Date: Aug. 24, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-984814-56-2

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Dial Books

Review Posted Online: June 10, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2021

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DARK PARTS OF THE UNIVERSE

A multifaceted thriller with a powerful social message.

Residents of a small town experience a reckoning when a mysterious app leads a group of teens to a dead body.

The first time he plays Manifest Atlas, an app game that people claim can give you anything you ask for, Willie Eckles wants a sign. Life feels stagnant in rural Calico Springs, a predominantly white Missouri town, and Willie yearns for some direction. He’s mystified to find that the app delivers on his requests—albeit with a cryptic twist each time—but no one believes him, not even Bones, his older brother. Eventually, Willie convinces Bones and his friends (including Sarai from neighboring Lawton, a predominantly Black town) to play with him, but they get more than they bargained for when it leads them to the dead body of Sarai’s white stepfather, who was in a rare interracial marriage. Unconvinced by the authorities’ ruling out of foul play, Willie and his group begin an investigation that stirs up tensions in a community that doesn’t like people probing for answers. As Willie tests the limits of the game’s abilities, he finds that their small town holds darker secrets than he ever expected. Willie’s journey is one of awakening—opening his eyes to social problems and choosing to face that reality rather than turn from it. The page-turning suspense is a draw, but the book’s ultimate strength is its skillful exploration of racial injustice in rural America.

A multifaceted thriller with a powerful social message. (author’s note, further reading) (Thriller. 14-18)

Pub Date: April 23, 2024

ISBN: 9780063160484

Page Count: 432

Publisher: Katherine Tegen/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: Feb. 3, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 1, 2024

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WHAT BIG TEETH

Shadowy, gothic, labyrinthine.

A homecoming spurs a strange family’s transformation.

Eleanor has left her nun-led boarding school after a violent incident with another student. She’s been away for years, without a single letter from her sister in response to dozens of hers and with only the foggiest memories of her extended family. When she arrives at her ancestral home in the small Maine town of Winterport, the mystery isn’t whether or not she comes from a family of werewolves but rather why she can’t find a wolf inside herself. Other questions swirl around her mother, whose body is half-covered in amphibian polyps; her grandmother’s enigmatic accountant, whom everyone is slightly in love with and who hasn’t aged in decades; and the long absence of her maternal grandmother, a stout, lavender-scented woman from France who goes by Grandmere and, like everyone else in this story, is more than she seems. Extended chapters with long, florid descriptions of the setting make the story drag somewhat. Keeping the tale tightly tied to an atmospheric old mansion and a reclusive, tightknit, supernaturally dysfunctional family gives it an almost claustrophobic feel. The decline of an old family with European roots is a classic theme in literature, here given horror-novel elements, with a slowness and complexity best suited for patient older readers.

Shadowy, gothic, labyrinthine. (Horror. 14-18)

Pub Date: Feb. 2, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-374-31430-9

Page Count: 400

Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux

Review Posted Online: Nov. 11, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Dec. 1, 2020

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