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Book Review: The Language of Ghosts by Heather Fawcett

cover image for The Language of Ghosts by Heather Fawcett

The Language of Ghosts by Heather Fawcett ( Bookshop.org | Amazon.com )

Balzer + Bray, 2020

ISBN-13: 978-0062854544

Available: Hardcover, Kindle edition, audiobook, audio CD (pre-order)

Princess Noa Marchena and her sister Mite escape a deadly palace coup with their older brother, now king, Julian, a dark magician with command of all nine languages of magic.  Since dark magicians have been known to lose themselves to dark magic, Noa makes it her business to act as Julian’s conscience. Hidden away on a moving island protected by a sea serpent, Julian plans his return to his country and his throne.  Then he learns that Xavier, the leader of the coup, is killing all dark magicians in his kingdom and is seeking the lost languages of magic in order to find a magician who can use them to defeat Julian. The Marchenas discover one before Xavier; the language of ghosts, which Noa names Shiver. The language of ghosts allows someone who can use it to travel through the land of death, and to see and speak to ghosts. The ability to read and understand it is rare, but Noa, until then without magical abilities, discovers that she is able to understand it.

What with the suspenseful palace coup and dark magicians, at the beginning and a title like The Language of Ghosts, I expected a little more spookiness to the story. It’s been compared to Howl’s Moving Castle, and it does have a magically moving island and a crabby magician, but it doesn’t have the depth or humor of that book.  It is more likely to appeal to fans of Jessica Day George than it is to readers of Mary Downing Hahn. The Language of Ghosts is an okay middle-grade fantasy with a few genuinely suspenseful moments, enjoyable but not outstanding and certainly not as ghosty as I expected it to be.

Book Review: Mayhem by Estelle Laure

Cover of Mayhem by Estelle Laure

Mayhem by Estelle Laure  (  Bookshop.org  | Amazon.com )

Wednesday Books, 2020

ISBN-13: 9781250297938

Available: Hardcover, ebook, audiobook

 

Mayhem Brayburn’s mother fled her home in Santa Maria, California, after her husband Lucas died, cutting all ties and marrying again to another man in a small town in Texas. The tradeoff she’s made is that her new husband beats her, and in avoiding the reality of her situation, she has become an alcoholic and addict. When Mayhem’s stepfather turns against her, her mother finally realizes the situation is untenable, and having nowhere else to go, she flees with Mayhem back to her sister Elle and childhood home in Santa Maria.

As Roxy tries to recover from her destructive relationship and her addiction, Mayhem develops relationships with Elle’s foster children: Neve, Jason, and Kidd. The three of them take her to their “hideaway”, a difficult-to-reach sea cave with a freshwater spring, and tell her that to truly be one of them she must drink from the spring, but once she does, she won’t be able to leave Santa Maria. After drinking the water, Mayhem can see the hidden secrets in other people’s minds. Her aunt explains that generations of the women in Mayhem’s family have drunk and developed an addiction to the water, dating back to the rape of the first woman in their family to come to Santa Maria. The water in the “hideaway” gives the Brayburn women the power to see secrets, but the price is that they must identify predatory men, drain their souls, and kill them. Elle tells her that the Brayburn women are the only ones able to preserve their sanity after drinking the water, so the people of Santa Maria are at risk if Mayhem doesn’t step up. A serial killer, the Sand Snatcher, is on the loose, and Mayhem’s first assignment is to find him, drain him, and kill him. And then there’s the problem of Mayhem’s stepfather, who isn’t ready to let go…

Interleaved with Mayhem’s story (which takes place in 1987) are journal entries and documents Mayhem has discovered by the Brayburn women who have come before her, beginning with the first, Julianna, and going through the generations: Julianna’s daughter Billie, Billie’s daughter Stitcher, and Stitcher’s daughter Roxy (Mayhem’s mother). While short, these express the individual personality of each woman effectively, and lead Mayhem to understand her part in the community of Santa Maria.

It is refreshing to see a new kind of monster show up in the horror genre. Elle’s best guess is that the Brayburn women are similar to the sluagh, but while the author may have taken inspiration from their legend, it’s been transformed into something different. The Brayburn women are monsters who must be fed, but they’re also saviors for the girls and women of Santa Maria, and while it may not be openly discussed, the town knows it. The Brayburn women exact a terrible kind of justice on predatory men that the law cannot, and for many girls and women this may be a cathartic, if disturbing, read.

 

Contains: Murder, torture, rape, violence, suicide.

 

 

 

 

Book Review: In the Vines by Shannon Kirk

Cover image of In The Vines by Shannon Kirk

In The Vines: A Thriller by Shannon Kirk (Bookshop.orgAmazon.com )

Thomas & Mercer, Seattle, 2018

ISBN-13: 9781503901940 (hardcover)

ISBN-13: 9781503900752 (paperback)

Available: Hardcover, Paperback, Kindle edition, compact disc, MP3 CD

 

In The Vines: A Thriller by Shannon Kirk is a murder mystery with a sprinkling of horror and gore. Fans of Edgar Allan Poe will recognize the technique of peeling away the layers of an onion, slowly revealing past sins, guilt, self-doubt and escalating violence. The main characters are Mary Olivia Pentecost, aka Mop, and Lynette Viola Vandonveer, aka Aunty Liv. They are descendants of Boston Brahmins, both with scions  who seem to have guilty secrets, as well as privilege and power. Their character traits and secrets lead to tragedy.

 

Mop is a recent college graduate searching for her own identity She is to marry her childhood sweetheart, a son of a nouveau-riche family with an adjoining estate in Rye, New Hampshire. Aunty Liv is an unmarried nurse having an illicit affair with a Boston surgeon, and is spying on her lover’s wife. The novel begins with Mop bleeding from a leg wound, dragging an unconscious, unnamed companion out of hiding during a nor’easter. An unidentified, shrouded figure wields an ax over them. Who are they? How did they come to this? What will be the story’s denouement?

 

The author uses the voices of Mop and Aunty Liv to narrate the story. The story jumps back and forth between scenes from the present, two years in the past and two weeks ago. Kirk’s technique is disconcerting, but it is important in slowly revealing the characters’ secrets and building a sense of frustration, anxiety and anticipation in readers. The main characters are well-drawn, and readers will understand why they make seemingly bad decisions that often lead to disaster.  The author describes the ocean, beach, rocks, cliffs, trees and brambles of New England’s coast beautifully. They become participants in the story. Highly recommended for adults.

 

Contains: Moderate gore, moderate violence, mild profanity

 

Reviewed by Robert D. Yee