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SPECULATION

Provides a new lens to explore histories that can haunt and help us.

Ten-year-old Winna Cole can see ghosts—and they’ve got a mystery for her to solve.

When Winna hears the crunch of her glasses breaking underneath her sister Tupelo’s butt, she literally cannot see how she’s going to enjoy her time in Vandalia. Fortunately, Grampa Carl held on to a pair of spectacles that belonged to her Great-Aunt Estelle, and they help her communicate with her ancestors on a magical journey to save her mom and herself. You see, as she escaped slavery, Winna’s Great-Great Grandmother Winona’s firstborn son, Key, was stolen. Her grief was so great that she unwittingly cursed her family to the Burden of the Coles: They will have ill health and no rest in death until Key is returned to her. Now Winna’s mother’s health is failing, and when Estelle’s ghost reveals that Key is still alive, it’s up to Winna to find him and bring him home. Shawl imaginatively winds suspense, humor, and loss in this story that shows how the past isn’t so far behind us. They also spotlight the troubled blood connections that chattel slavery created across different races and across the country. Through Winna’s family, readers see the importance of oral storytelling: The book celebrates it as a shining beacon for those of us who still have elders who can tell stories while offering space to mourn traditions and loved ones we’ve lost.

Provides a new lens to explore histories that can haunt and help us. (author’s note, family trees) (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: Feb. 14, 2023

ISBN: 9781620149591

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Tu Books

Review Posted Online: Dec. 23, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2023

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A WILDER MAGIC

Inconsistent and messy.

A young Appalachian girl uses magic to try and save her home.

Sybaline Shaw’s family has known for years that their magical valley in the Appalachian foothills would be flooded when the nearby Tennessee Valley Authority dam was complete. Her father is off fighting in World War II, but Momma has already packed up their household. Sybaline alone of her family can’t accept this. Everyone in the Lark bloodline can use magic within the valley to shape the natural world, but they risk transforming themselves into plants or trees—a danger Sybaline and her cousins regularly ignore. After lying to their parents shortly before everyone moves away, Sybaline and her cousin Nettle—each claiming to be going to stay with the other—remain behind and create a bubble around Sybaline’s home, which soon turns into a dark, dank prison on the bottom of the newly formed lake. Now Sybaline and Nettle are becoming trees—how will they escape? Told from Sybaline’s point of view with matter-of-factness, the novel blends fantasy and reality with worldbuilding that leaves unanswered questions. Brief mentions of aluminum plants supporting the war effort, riots by White men over Black construction workers, and the Trail of Tears contrast with the Edenlike imagery of the lush, unspoiled valley and its sheltered occupants living off the land in yet another Appalachian story supporting the trope that technology is predominantly bad. Main characters are assumed to be White.

Inconsistent and messy. (Historical fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: May 4, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-72820-964-7

Page Count: 272

Publisher: Sourcebooks Young Readers

Review Posted Online: Feb. 25, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2021

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THE WHISPERING FOG

A swamp full of secrets and a quirky cast of characters combine for a delightfully dark debut.

When Neve’s older sister, Rose, is kidnapped by a swamp witch, she must learn to listen to her own instincts or risk losing her sister forever.

Though they aren’t twins—Rose is 11 months older—seventh grade sisters Rose and Neve are rarely apart. Headstrong, outgoing Rose has always been in charge of everything, which has been fine with creative, introverted Neve. Soon after their parents separate and the girls move with their mom to a creepy old house in Etters, South Carolina, a strange fog emerges from the woods and disappears with Rose, leaving Neve to figure out what happened and how to save her sister. Most of the adults around her are emotionally absent and, frankly, rather useless. Although there are a few loose ends and unanswered questions, this goosebump-inducing, Brothers Grimm–inspired contemporary fairy tale deftly illustrates how a younger sibling begins to outgrow both an older one’s shadow and the expectations of their parents as she pursues her own sense of self and takes the initiative in a daring rescue mission. Main characters read as White; alluding to the source material, “Snow-White and Rose-Red,” one sister has white-blond hair and the other’s is auburn. Names and physical descriptions cue some diversity in the supporting cast.

A swamp full of secrets and a quirky cast of characters combine for a delightfully dark debut. (Fantasy. 8-12)

Pub Date: Sept. 13, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-358-67455-9

Page Count: 240

Publisher: Clarion/HarperCollins

Review Posted Online: June 21, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2022

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