age: YA
genre: paranormal
rating: 4/8 tentacles
Evie "I want to see my name in lights" O'Neill gets shipped off to live
with her uncle in Manhattan after her flapper antics cause trouble for
her well-to-do parents. In New York, a ritualistic serial killer whose
crimes smack with the supernatural is on the loose and the police ask
Evie's Uncle Will, owner of a Museum of the Occult, to consult on the
case. Unknown to her family, Evie posses a supernatural power of her
own, the ability to get psychic readings from objects, and she is convinced that if she uses
it, she could play an essential role in the capture of the murderer.
But this murderer proves to be darker and more elusive than Evie, Will,
& Co. expect.
This book shares some similarities with Libba
Bray's previous supernatural trilogy. Both follow the exploits of a
young girl in a supernatural version of history. Unlike Gemma's story,
The Diviners is written in third person, and instead of focusing
primarily on one character, skips between a multitude of them. The book
improves when we've had time to get to know the characters a little
more. The idea of the American Dream seems to pervade the novel. Most
of the characters are motivated by a desire to make something of
themselves, to be famous, glamorous, celebrated. To achieve an ideal.
While
the book did entertain me, I still felt that something was missing.
Instead of the distant, sweeping descriptions of the era, which are
scattered throughout the novel (one follows wind, blowing through the
city and observing its inhabitants), I would have preferred more time
spent on individual characters and more specific, more sensory
descriptions of the time period filtered through the points of view of
the characters. There was a little too much name dropping to convince
me of the setting's authenticity and a little too much stereotype to
allow me to connect fully with the characters. The only one I really
empathize with is Mabel--I would have like to see more of her. I hope
she plays a bigger role in the rest of the trilogy.
The story
itself is creepy and mysterious, a good fall read. The plot was
resolved at the end (Hooray!), but I'm still left with questions about
the characters and their lives. I look forward to the unfolding of
these mysteries in the next installment of the trilogy.
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