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THE GIRL FROM THE WELL

A chilling, bloody ghost story that resonates.

A Japanese ghost tries to fight an evil spirit that haunts a 15-year-old boy in this strange, Stephen King–like horror story.

Okiku was brutally murdered 300 years ago at age 16 and has roamed the world ever since, killing child murderers. Murderers unwittingly carry the ghosts of those they have killed on their backs, making them easy for Okiku to spot. She’s chasing down a particularly nasty serial killer when she encounters Tarquin, the son of an American man and a Japanese woman. Now institutionalized, Tarquin’s mother inscribed strange tattoos on the boy, which act as seals to imprison the evil ghost inside him. The family travels to Japan after Tarquin’s captive spirit horribly murders his mother so they can scatter the dead woman’s ashes at a shrine. There, they meet some women who can try to free Tarquin from his spirit tormentor, but exorcisms aren’t easy. Chupeco bases her modern horror story on an old Japanese folk tale about a vengeful spirit named Okiku. She writes in Okiku’s formal, ghostly voice, requiring readers to piece together strange episodes that introduce not only Okiku, but also Tarquin and his family, only slowly revealing the severity of the danger Tarquin faces. They come together eventually to reveal the full story and, with their opacity, contribute to the book’s slowly mounting suspense.

A chilling, bloody ghost story that resonates. (Paranormal suspense. 14-18)

Pub Date: Aug. 5, 2014

ISBN: 978-1-4022-9218-7

Page Count: 304

Publisher: Sourcebooks Fire

Review Posted Online: May 11, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 1, 2014

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COVEN

Not a must-read but a solid, witchy story.

A teenage witch is torn between the life she’s built and the bonds of a coven she barely knows.

Emsy’s life is mostly that of an ordinary California teen, except for some occasional pyrokinesis. Magic and ritual are her parents’ things—Emsy would rather be surfing. So when her mother tells her that a family of witches has been brutally murdered and they must move back to upstate New York to rejoin their coven for safety, Emsy’s world comes to a shattering halt. Leaving her friends and girlfriend is bad enough, but Emsy soon realizes just how little her parents told her about witches and magic as she suddenly finds herself training to wield a power she’s never embraced. Desperate to undo it all and return to normal, Emsy agrees to help another teen coven member who is even more devastated than she is to bring his family back from the dead. But every choice in the world of magic comes with a cost, and Emsy’s involve the very highest of stakes and direst of consequences. Seaton’s richly colored illustrations are dynamic, adding to the atmosphere. The multiracial, intergenerational ensemble cast of queer witches facing a deadly, unknown magical threat forms a strong narrative foundation, enhanced by intense character conflict and action. The neatly wrapped-up conclusion doesn’t deliver on such compelling tension, however, and despite some remaining questions leaving room for a sequel, the ending may leave readers deflated.

Not a must-read but a solid, witchy story. (Graphic fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 6, 2022

ISBN: 978-0-593-11216-8

Page Count: 288

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: June 21, 2022

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2022

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THE BONE HOUSES

A stand-alone dark fantasy that readers will want to sink their teeth into despite its flaws.

Ever since the dead have started coming back to life, gravedigger Ryn has been out of work.

Desperate to protect her younger siblings and clear her family’s debts to a greedy landlord, Ryn connects with Ellis, a lost mapmaker who will pay her to guide him into the mountains. Raised in Caer Aberhen after being found in the woods by a prince, Ellis now searches for any trace of his parents, though chronic shoulder pain from a mysterious injury slows him down. Through a forbidden forest teeming with monsters, together they look for a mythical cauldron that will end the curse of the risen dead. Lloyd-Jones (The Hearts We Sold, 2017, etc.) gruesomely describes the undead, called bone houses, with their rotting flesh and unseeing eye sockets—yet the mood never gets too dark thanks to a tenacious and strangely adorable undead goat along with some mild romantic tension. The journey is slow to get started, the numerous attacks and fight scenes with bone houses grow tedious, and the twists are predictable, but nonetheless this Welsh-inspired story is haunting and compelling. Apart from a dark-skinned villager depicted as an outsider, all characters are presumed white.

A stand-alone dark fantasy that readers will want to sink their teeth into despite its flaws. (Fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Sept. 24, 2019

ISBN: 978-0-316-41841-6

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: June 22, 2019

Kirkus Reviews Issue: July 15, 2019

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