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BLACK WATER SISTER by Zen Cho

BLACK WATER SISTER

by Zen Cho

Pub Date: May 11th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-425-28343-1
Publisher: Ace/Berkley

Jessamyn Teoh’s grandmother is back from the dead—but Jess is the only one who can hear her.

After financial setbacks, Harvard graduate Jess and her parents move back to Malaysia looking for a fresh start. Having grown up in the United States, Jess finds returning to Malaysia is an adjustment, as she tries to balance her family’s expectations (she’s living in her aunt’s house, after all) with her own ideas about what her life should look like (maybe her girlfriend shouldn’t be secret). In the middle of making sure her father doesn’t work too hard and entertaining a steady stream of her aunt’s friends, Jess is visited by her grandmother’s ghost, who definitely has unfinished business. Soon, Jess is mixed up in a world of real estate tycoons, petty gangsters, and gods who really don’t like it when you tamper with their shrines—and the Black Water Sister is the worst of them all. Fast-paced and full of witty one-liners, with a solid grounding in contemporary Malaysia, this is a fun urban fantasy that touches on the ways in which trauma and violence echo through generations. Cho’s evocation of place is impeccable, but while the plot moves quickly between supernatural events and familial squabbles, the relationships between characters remain somewhat underdeveloped; the most important journey is the one Jess takes toward understanding herself and her own autonomy.

A charming romp through a world where Malaysian spirits are very real.