A lonely girl embarks on a quest to help her late grandmother.
When 12-year-old Eliot Katayama’s family moves from California to Roseheart, Maine, her parents want a fresh start, but Eliot is still grieving the death of Babung, her beloved paternal grandmother, and struggling with the dementia that stole Babung’s memories before she died. Although her parents urge her to move on, Eliot fears Babung is lonely and confused in the afterlife without her memories; she hopes to prove ghosts are real and reconnect with her. Meeting neighbor Mrs. Delvaux and her granddaughter, Hazel, is the opportunity she’s been waiting for: Their home is rumored to be haunted, and local kids believe Mrs. Delvaux is a soul-stealing witch. Indeed, Eliot soon discovers ghosts in the house, but why are they stuck there? Why have they lost their memories, preventing them from crossing to the other side? As she attempts to help these ghosts recall who they are, Eliot juggles growing romantic feelings for Hazel, parents who don’t take her seriously, and encounters with a fearsome monster, all while continuing to try to reach Babung. Although the novel ends on a satisfactory note, the plot is disjointed at times, and some characters feel flat. Richer details about Babung and Eliot’s relationship would have made Eliot’s obsessive quest more understandable for readers. Eliot’s father and grandmother are Japanese American from Hawaii; her mother is racially ambiguous.
An engrossing but somewhat uneven tale about grief, ghosts, and the power of memory.
(Paranormal. 8-12)