Author: Allison Rushby
Genre: fantasy
Similar books: A Snicker of Magic by Natalie Lloyd
The Lost Boy's Gift by Kimberly Willis Holt
Rating:
Not as spooky as I expected |
Ten-year-old Immy and her family have run away from their storm cloud of problems to a tiny village in Cambridgeshire, England, where her depressed physician father can take a sabbatical and get back on his feet. Luckily, they find an adorable thatched cottage to begin a new life in. But their new home comes with one downside: in the backyard, there is an ancient, dark, and fierce-looking mulberry tree that has ceased bearing any fruit. There’s a legend that the towering tree steals away girls who live in the cottage on the eve of their eleventh birthday, and villagers even cross the street when they pass by the house. Of course, Immy thinks this is all ridiculous. But then she starts to hear a strange song in her head. . . . In a page-turner perfect for middle-graders, Allison Rushby folds themes of new-school travails, finding friends, being embarrassed by parents, and learning empathy into a deliciously goose-bumpy supernatural mystery.
My opinion: For a curse plot to be strong, it has to follow a strict rule structure. That's the strength of this novel. The curse follows a very specific pattern. So, then, does the plot: strange occurrences lead to the discovery of the curse, leading to specific steps being taken to break the curse. This book has a long lead in, devoting far more time to revealing the curse than to the curse breaking. This imbalance, though, allows for more development of the characters and their relationships, the subplots of mental illness and the ways we treat each other. The stakes are actually pretty low so it's not especially spooky. Still, an interesting exploration of the way a single action can have long ranging consequences.
Advanced Reader Copy provided by NetGalley.
I wanted this to be a lot spookier as well!
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