Home » Posts tagged "book review" (Page 19)

Book Review: The Witching Stone by Danny Weston

cover art for The Witching Stone by Danny Weston   

The Witching Stone by Danny Weston ( Amazon.com )

uclanpublishing, 2020

ISBN-13: 13579108642

Available: Paperback

 

The Witching Stone by Danny Weston is an enjoyable read for young readers who appreciate coming-of-age stories with a touch of mystery and horror. Danny Weston is the pseudonym for Phillip Caveney, who has written many thrillers for adults, children and teenagers, some of which have won prizes.

Teenager Alfie Travers has just been dumped by his longtime girlfriend. Alfie agrees to accompany his father on a job in a small English village, but is prepared to be bored out of his gourd. Killing time in the church graveyard, he sees a large stone marking the grave of the alleged witch Meg Shelton, who died in 1705. Mia, a goth teen, challenges him to summon the witch by walking counterclockwise around the stone three times, while intoning “I don’t believe in witches!”

Of course, Meg apparates before Alfie. She claims she’s not a witch and that her infant son was taken from her. Meg threatens to kill everyone Alfie loves if he doesn’t find the grave of her son.

Alfie and Mia search for clues. Meg, impatient for progress, shows her anger by turning the village’s milk sour, putting toads in muesli, and blowing up computers. Alfie and Mia’s search takes them to library archives, the ruins of Meg’s cottage and a viscount’s estate with an impenetrable maze of yews. Was Meg a witch? How did she die? What happened to her son?

The plot is straightforward and easy to follow. The narrative is simple and direct. There are only a few punctuation errors. Recommended for ages 10-14.

Contains: discussion of teenage pregnancy

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee

Book Review: Night of the Mannequins by Stephen Graham Jones

cover art for Night of the Mannequins by Stephen Graham Jones

Night of the Mannequins by Stephen Graham Jones (  Bookshop.org  |  Amazon.com )

Tor.com, 2020

ISBN-13 : 978-1250752079

Available: Paperback, Kindle edition

 

Night of the Mannequins is a short book, a rocket-fuel ride from beginning to end. It is narrated by teenage Sawyer, one of an offbeat, close-knit group of friends who have known each other forever and are about to graduate high school and go their separate ways. Stephen Graham Jones does a genius job with Sawyer’s narrative voice: it really feels like he is talking right to you. After they’re thrown out of a movie theater where their friend Shanna works, the friends come up with the idea of sneaking a discarded mannequin in to prank Shanna and the manager. Instead, the prank fizzles, the mannequin disappears, and Sawyer is certain he saw it walk out of the theater. After one of the Shanna is killed, along with her family, when a truck plows into her house, Sawyer is convinced the mannequin is the culprit and that he and his friends and their families are all in danger of death by mannequin. He is certain he has seen the mannequin and that the mannequin is stealing and eating Miracle-Gro to turn into a gigantic monster. Sawyer decides he has to act before the monster mannequin can. Jones takes us far down the rabbit hole in this surreal and disturbing tale as Sawyer’s perceptions become more and more skewed,  especially once he starts covering his face with a mannequin mask.

We don’t get to know the other friends well, but Sawyer’s feelings for them seem genuine, so you feel for them and their families when gory tragedy strikes. And wow, does it strike. Sawyer describes it in detail, and Jones does not pull his punches.

This is not intended to be a YA book but it very easily could appeal to YA horror readers looking for a bite-sized read. It’s short, fast-paced, and, unusual in YA horror these days, has a teenage boy as protagonist. With Night of the Mannequins you could hook someone who loves slasher movies but hasn’t shown much interest in reading.  Recommended for ages 15+

 

Book Review: The Graces by Laure Eve

cover for The Graces by Laure Eve

The Graces by Laure Eve (  Bookshop.org |  Amazon.com )

Amulet Books, 2016

ISBN-13 : 978-1419721236

Available: Hardcover, paperback, Kindle edition, audiobook

The narrator of The Graces is new to town, and ready to shed her old identity, including her name. The centers of attention at her school are the Graces, seventeen-year-old twins Thalia and Fenrin, and their younger sister, Summer. The Grace family has been entwined in the town’s history for generations, and there are rumors of witchcraft that surround them. They are a close-knit family that rarely let anyone into their circle, but, renaming herself River, she finds herself welcomed in. River herself is very closed off and rarely volunteers information about her life or family– she is always thinking about whether she has said or done the “right thing” to be accepted by the Graces, who she believes have a magical key to helping her solve her problems.

River, Summer, and a group of girls from school attempt to cast a love spell, which River secretly focuses on Fenrin. Developing a close friendship with Summer, who is her own age, River also attempts to create situations that will give her and Fenrin the opportunity for close contact, but these are always interrupted, and finally end in tragedy.

It’s easy to read the first part of this book and see the narrator as merely anxious, needy, and maybe a little manipulative, a wishful thinker swept up by a glamorous and mysterious family. The second part gives us a look under the surface of it all, and there’s where it starts getting disturbing, as there are some very unsettling powers that come to the fore.

There is a lot of suspension of disbelief required to buy into this book, but Eve keeps things erratic enough, with her unreliable narrator, and enough gaps between the real and unreal to keep a reader going. A couple of things are real flaws, though. The book uses a trope I loathe, of the “always absent but overprotective parents,” and the plot had some big holes in it that made the actions of certain characters very confusing, and led to an ending that was only partly satisfactory (there is a sequel, so hopefully some of that will be resolved in it). None of the characters are especially likable, but there’s enough intrigue and “fairy tale” atmosphere to appeal to a certain kind of teenage girl. Recommended.