The Great Dismal Swamp is ready to unearth family secrets.
In 1722, Babylou Mac, nearly 19, killed the preacher’s son right after he murdered her mother. With the owner of the plantation where the family was enslaved in pursuit, she and her siblings fled into the magic of the Great Dismal Swamp, a wild and dangerous place that offered death and salvation in turn. In modern times, Atlas returns to her grandmother Grannylou’s home for the Bornday celebration: She and three cousins, all born on Grannylou’s birthday, are turning 19. Atlas worries that Grannylou’s age is catching up to her; she speaks of impossible, magical things, including having lived for hundreds of years. Grannylou, in turn, sees in Atlas a beacon for the lost souls, “guided by the promises of our ancestors” and seeking a paradise hidden in the swamp—but she also warns against letting the wrong people in. When Grannylou decides to return to the swamp, the cousins must unravel the secrets of the Isle of Floriate, which “has been a refuge of necessity” that blesses those “brave enough to reach its shores.” They must also guard against old enemies with grudges against their family. Poetic language, lush descriptions, and characters so conflicted and nuanced as to feel real anchor the magical elements, while the cousins untangle centuries of heartbreaks and horrors inflicted by cruel white enslavers to learn where they came from and the gifts they’ve inherited.
A fierce, loving, and exquisite humanity-centered book.
(author’s note, sources) (Fantasy. 13-adult)