A House Unsettled
A House Unsettled
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2022--
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Annick Press
Annotation: "Who built this house? Whose money? Whose blood?" Ghosts aren't the only thing that can haunt a house. Trynne Delaney's ... more
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #362554
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Publisher: Annick Press
Copyright Date: 2022
Edition Date: 2022 Release Date: 10/25/22
Pages: 276 pages
ISBN: 1-7732-1695-3
ISBN 13: 978-1-7732-1695-9
Dewey: Fic
LCCN: 2022513253
Dimensions: 24 cm.
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

A haunted house, family, girl.Asha Walker is having a hard time. The 17-year-old's father is in prison for alleged embezzlement from a youth sports center (though anti-Black racism is a more likely culprit), and her mom is moving the two of them back to her family home in small-town New Brunswick. Locals believe the house is haunted, and Asha slowly comes to agree with them as events escalate from seeing faces in the ceiling and feeling spooky presences to full-on possession and ghostly violence. A variety of themes swirl around the story like spirits: Asha's relationship with her family, including her menacing stepfather; her own burgeoning queerness; her new friend's coming-out process; and Asha's Black and mixed-race presence in a town founded on racial exclusion and violence (her mother's ancestors were White settlers who arrived a few centuries ago). The slow pace means the plot picks up very slowly, and the truly creepy moments are tempered by the caring natures of two of the ghosts. There are plenty of metaphors to be mulled over, though one-"This place is…haunted with whiteness"-is pulled out explicitly for readers, and many other moments are laid out in ways that unfortunately feel more like arguments the author makes to readers rather than richly realized characters organically coming to their own conclusions.An atmospheric story let down by more telling than showing. (Paranormal. 13-17)

Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)

Delaney’s eerie, Canada-set debut centers 17-year-old biracial (Black and white) Asha Walker, who relocates to her estranged mother’s majority-white New Brunswick hometown to escape scrutiny following her father’s recent embezzlement conviction. When Asha and mom Traci move into a crumbling mansion owned by Traci’s late aunt, they’re longing for a new start. Though Asha hopes this change will be the perfect chance to reinvent herself, New Brunswick presents her with overwhelming interpersonal challenges. She feels unwelcome due to the town’s history of racial prejudice; her presumed-white and Lebanese neighbor, alluring Cole Levesque-Gerges, sparks unexpected feelings; and the arrival of Traci’s deceptive beau strains the pair’s already tense relationship. What’s more, she’s unsettled by increasingly chilling encounters with the spirits of her family’s dark past, which inhabit her new home. Though themes such as colonialism, police violence, and white privilege are only summarily explored, leading to underdeveloped messaging, and sporadic pacing causes narrative disconnect, Asha and Cole’s clash over their respective lived experiences is intensely rendered. Delaney capably crafts a creeping sense of horror that infuses this pensive paranormal tale with dread. Ages 14–up. (Oct.)

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Kirkus Reviews
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
Reading Level: 7.0
Interest Level: 9+
Lexile: HL720L

It's the first night in days that I don't wake up gasping for breath. Instead, it's Cole's screaming that wakes me.

Cole is lying flat on her back with her palms up, shrieking with her eyes open wide. I don't know if she's awake or not. Her face is blank and open in terror. The covers are twisted around me; I must have stolen them from her in the night. They tie me to myself. In the panic of trying to get out of the knots of the sheets, I'm not able to follow Cole's gaze. Whatever she's seeing is still eclipsed for me. If she can see what it is. To me, it looks like darkness. Finally, she takes a hoarse breath, then starts shaking with uncontrollable sobs.

When I get loose, I rub her shoulder softly. I still can't tell if she's awake or not. I don't know if you're supposed to disturb someone who is stuck between dreaming and waking. My hands are trembling, clammy. I follow her gaze to the exact point on the ceiling where I watch Aggie before I fall asleep.

"Did you see her too?" I ask Cole.



Excerpted from A House Unsettled by Trynne Delaney
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.

"Who built this house? Whose money? Whose blood?" Ghosts aren't the only thing that can haunt a house. Trynne Delaney's debut novel explores the insidious legacies of violence and oppression--and how Black, queer love and resistance can disrupt them. With her dad's incarceration, escalating fights with her mom, and an overbearing stepdad she's not sure she can trust, Asha is desperate for the fresh start promised by a move to the country. Her great aunt Aggie's crumbling, pest-ridden house isn't exactly what she had in mind, but the immediate connection she makes with her new neighbor Cole seems like a good sign. Soon, though, Asha's optimism is shadowed by strange and disturbing occurrences within the old house's walls: footsteps stalking the halls; a persistent chill; cold hands around her neck in the middle of the night . . . Fearing for her loved ones' safety--and her own--Asha seeks out the source of these terrifying incidents and uncovers secrets from the past that connect her and Cole's families and reach into the present. But as tensions with her mom and stepdad rise and Cole withdraws, Asha is left alone to try and break the cycle of violence that holds them all in its haunting grip.


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