Starred Review ALA Booklist
(Tue Dec 01 00:00:00 CST 2020)
Starred Review Maren carries on a typical existence in her small seaside town, living happily with her loving family and working at her grandmother's shop. Well, perhaps it's not completely typical, as, in addition to selling typewriters, Maren and her grandmother carefully craft and sell dreams to curious customers. There's only one limitation: dreams are only for personal consumption and can never ever be given to someone else. Things are going swimmingly until an accident puts Maren's beloved older sister deep into a coma, and when Maren breaks the rule, slipping her sister a dream in the hopes of speeding up her recovery, a sinister someone notices the misconduct and blackmails her into formulating terrible nightmares for a mysterious but clearly nefarious end. As magic in the town goes haywire, Maren has to untangle her mistakes and save her sister, along with their fantastical town. In this debut, Lesperance has crafted a wonderfully original world, similar to ours in many ways but completely extraordinary in others, with small amounts of magic neatly tucked alongside normal bits of life. The delightfully descriptive text sets a cozy scene, but there is also real danger and a deliciously disconcerting villain. There is magic and mayhem, horror and hope, and the thread of family and friendship weaving it all together.
Kirkus Reviews
Something is rotten in magical Rockpool Bay.Some residents of Rockpool Bay are born with specific magic that helps them with their businesses, such as the pharmacy with its charmed medicines and Maren's grandmother Lishta's dream shop, where Maren is learning to make both healing dreams and intense nightmares. Maren first meets Ms. Malo at the dream shop, where she demands to be sold 12 nightmares despite Lishta's limit of three, never to be administered to others without consent. Unfortunately, Maren herself breaks the rule, giving her sister, Hallie, a dream in an effort to wake her from her coma. Ms. Malo catches Maren and threatens to expose her if Maren doesn't supply her with nightmares. Maren uneasily acquiesces but notices that some magic-imbued shops are closing. She believes it's Ms. Malo's doing, but what is her motive? The buildup is slow and creepy, and sinister events and changes in the town add to the threatening atmosphere. More anxiety-provoking is Maren's dilemma: tell the truth and destroy her family or aid Ms. Malo and destroy Rockpool Bay? The author skillfully ratchets up the tension when Lishta, Maren, and her friend are captured by Ms. Malo. It takes all of Maren's knowledge and courage to stage their rescue as she grows and learns that the love of friends and family is the best magic of all. Characters default to White.A spine-tingling adventure. (Fantasy. 8-12)
Publishers Weekly
(Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Employing sensory details and potent imagery, Lesperance (The Wide Starlight) constructs a fanciful world in which dreams and nightmares are a commodity, created, bought, and sold. Desperate to help her older sister, Hallie, who-s in a coma following an accident, 12-year-old Maren Partridge breaks her dream-making family-s number one rule-no giving dreams without the receiver-s consent-by sneaking Hallie a pleasant one on her birthday. Maren is blackmailed for the act by sinister Ms. Malo, an insect-wielding enigma with a -hearty appetite- for nightmares: in exchange for an escalating supply of horrifying dreams and forbidden ingredients, she-ll keep Maren-s secret to herself. As the inhabitants of whimsically magic-infused Rockpool Bay begin suffering odd mishaps, Maren struggles to escape her tormentor-s demands. But when her grandmother is kidnapped, it-s up to Maren and her former best friend, Amos, to rescue Gran-Gran and thwart Malo-s scheme. Lesperance crafts a resourceful heroine whose loyalty forces her to confront a difficult situation and come out stronger. She also folds a satisfying sense of wonder into the quaint town, balanced with a chilling element of darkness. Ages 8-14. Agent: Kathleen Rushall, Andrea Brown Literary. (Jan.)