Publisher's Hardcover ©2019 | -- |
Paperback ©2020 | -- |
Female friendship. Fiction.
Mountain life. Fiction.
Aircraft accident victims. Fiction.
Ariel is a teenage girl from a place called Avalon, where Big Daddy leader and preacher s created a cultlike community, full of rules and traditions that differ from those in the modern world just a few miles away. D, Min, and Spider are friends from that modern world, seeking closure after their siblings Kat and Jonathan died in a plane crash near the Grey Sisters mountains. When the four girls, all on the run and wanting something they're unsure they can have, meet, their dissimilar lives collide. And what they find hidden in the unforgiving mountain terrain will change everything. Will they survive their encounter with Avalon's soldiers, and with Big Daddy himself? Can Ariel ever leave her home behind, even though it's all she knows? Told in alternating perspectives, this is a well-rounded story of lives that intersect in unexpected ways. The engrossing narration will draw in readers looking for a creepy modern thriller. A solid purchase for larger collections.
Kirkus Reviews (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)Three teenage girls encounter much more than painful memories when they travel to the mountainside site of the plane crash that killed their loved ones.It's been two years since a small plane went down near a mountain peak formation called The Grey Sisters. Now, 11th graders D and Spider and their friend Min are heading to the site where D's twin sister, Kat, and Spider's younger brother, Jonathan, died. D seeks closure for the loss of her other half, the girl whom Spider loved—but Spider, whose self-destructive streak since the tragedy has caused friction, isn't convinced they'll find it. What they do find is a clash with Big Daddy, the leader of a survivalist group. Ariel is one of Big Daddy's teen "soldiers." She's desperate to get fellow soldier Aaron to a doctor after he's viciously mauled by a bear, and she sees an opportunity after a chance encounter with the girls. Meanwhile, a bloody coup is brewing at Big Daddy's compound. D's, Spider's, and Min's friendship and grief are painted in realistic strokes, and Ariel's own heartbreaking narrative reveals an all-too-believable place where women and girls are cogs in a madman's extremist vision. Treggiari (Blood Will Out, 2018, etc.) offers chills both subtle and shocking, and readers won't be able to turn the pages fast enough. All characters are assumed white.Jaw-dropping twists and a distinct Deliverance vibe elevate this riveting thriller. (Thriller. 14-adult)
School Library Journal (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)Gr 9 Up--Two years ago, D and Spider both lost their siblings in a plane crash. For Spider, it was her brother Jonathan, and for D, her twin sister, Kat. Their bodies were never recovered. The flight attendant, the tragedy's sole survivor, recently awoke from a coma, which triggered D's need for closure. The two teens, along with their friend Min, make the trek to the crash site deep in the mountains to mark an ending and move forward. Along the way, the trio encounter car troubles, the feeling that they're always being watched, and Ariela girl who has escaped from her survivalist, cult-like community. Ariel has recently experienced her own tragic accident and is risking her life to seek help. Their paths merge and together they're able to help each other and gain insight into the devastating crash that changed their lives. Told in alternating points of view, Treggiari's writing encapsulates the cold, damp woods. Readers will feel the chill in their bones. Dark and gripping, this story is slow to start, but once the action picks up readers will have a hard time putting the book down. VERDICT Perfect for fans of Karen M. McManus. Purchase for larger collections where psychological thrillers circulate well.-Alicia Kalan, The Northwest School, Seattle
Coretta Scott King Honor
ALA Booklist (Tue Oct 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
Kirkus Reviews (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
School Library Journal (Thu Aug 01 00:00:00 CDT 2019)
D must have snuck him into the bag and kept Floppy Giraffe with her. They were ancient stuffed toys knitted for them at birth by their Nonna. They normally lived on the bookshelf, but not when the girls were sick or one of them was traveling solo. Kat smiled to herself. He was almost as good as having her twin sister sitting right there beside her, and she wished she could cuddle with him unnoticed for a minute but that was unlikely. She touched her fingertip to her lips, pressed a kiss onto his poor worn head, and hid him away again.
It was a small plane, and the twenty-eight kids and two teachers filled it completely. That was half of the tenth grade; the other half were building houses for low-income families, but she'd done that in grade nine and quickly realized that she wasn't compatible with power tools.
Next to her, Jonathan interrupted the contemplation of his heavy book and swept his gaze around the crowded airplane. "G-force," he said, staring at her with his amber eyes. His heavy-framed glasses magnified them hugely. It was unsettling, like looking at a praying mantis close up. Funny how, even though he and his just-eleven-months-older sister, Spider, shared an undeniable family resemblance -- same eyes and brows, same strong features and dark hair -- Jonathan hadn't grown into his face and body yet. It was as if he was wearing a skin suit a few sizes too big and it made him ungainly and awkward. Spider was the opposite of that, sure and graceful in her movements. "You know, gravity."
Kat grunted. He was always saying weird things and then not explaining them. This time though, he continued. "But are we going up or down? Roller coaster?" He moved his hand in a wave motion and pursed his lips.
She had no answer, nor could she be sure he was even talking to her. More like at her. Spider always said Jonathan was on his own trip, and barely noticed other people. He even referred to them as humans for chrissakes, as if he were from outer space or something. And being so smart, he'd gone straight from eighth grade into tenth -- their grade. It was something he never let any of them forget.
Still, they'd all grown up together on the same cul-de-sac and Kat got him, or at least more than most.
"Is your seat belt on?" he asked, poking at her upper arm.
She lifted the corner of her shirt to show him and returned her attention to the thick notebook open on her lap. It was her idea book, stuffed full of images and clippings. Everything and everyone she drew inspiration from. At the moment, she was totally in love with Mexican floral embroidery and Yayoi Kusama's crazy polka dots. Sometimes when she was snuggled under the covers in her bed, she saw flowers and butterflies imprinted on everything. A glorious world of movement and color.
The plane dipped, propelling her stomach into her neck.
Two rows up, she could see the back of Henry Chen's tousled head, John Brewster's hand high-fiving him. The noise of chatter washed over her, transforming the cabin into an even smaller space.
Surely they must be getting close? She estimated they were somewhere near Spectacle Lakes. Her Nonna had told her that they were so blue they were like a slice of heaven.
Excerpted from The Grey Sisters by Jo Treggiari
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
Two years after a deadly plane crash, best friends D and Spider head into the mountains to face their grief. A gripping psychological thriller for fans of The Cheerleaders and Sadie.
D and Spider have always been close friends, and they are further united in their shared heartbreak: they both lost siblings in a horrific plane crash two years earlier. A chance sighting of a beloved cuddly toy in a photograph of the only survivor spurs D to finally seek closure. She and Spider and their friend, Min, set off on a road trip to the mountainside site of that terrible crash.
Ariel has lived on the mountain all her life. She and her extended family are looked down upon by neighboring townsfolk and she has learned to live by her wits, trusting few people outside of her isolated, survivalist community. A terrifying attack sends her down the mountain for help; on her way, she comes upon the three girls -- a chance encounter that will have far-reaching consequences for them all.