The first time I read Premonitions was back in fifth grade; this year, I found myself thinking about it once again and decided to read it once more for the sake of nostalgia. Premonitions was our class novel back in the day, and it spoke to everything young me happened to love in a book; it had an interesting plot, it had supernatural elements that piqued my interest, and it had a fast-paced plot. Rereading the book this year, I find myself feeling more or less the same about these things.
Premonitions is a novel about a girl named Gracie who happens to experience, you guessed it, premonitions. At the start of the novel, we find out that Gracie lives with her aunt and cousin due to her mother's death, which is something she foresaw in her visions but happened to be unable to stop. Gracie wants nothing to do with these visions, but she can't stop them from coming, so she lives with them. When Gracie's friend Emily is kidnapped after a fight between them, Gracie feels responsible as she had seen that something would happen to Emily and she didn't try to stop her from leaving, and now she must use the visions that she's been trying to ignore in order to help save her friend.
As mentioned earlier, the book is fast-paced. Within thirty-seven chapters, the story is over, and the plot has been resolved neatly, leaving the reader with a satisfying conclusion. The plot is interesting enough that once Emily is kidnapped, you won't want to put the book down until you find out what happens to her.
Another thing that warrants mention are the characters; there are only two characters that get fully developed in this book; this isn't to say the others aren't interesting; it's just that they're not the focus of the book, and we don't spend much time with them. The main character Gracie is aloof, she's gone through loss, and as far as she's concerned, she doesn't quite fit in in her new life. Throughout the novel, as she goes through her investigation, she spends more time with her cousin and her aunt and starts developing a relationship with them, and by the end, she finds herself warming up to them and considering herself part of their family. The other character that is well developed happens to be the villain of the novel; you get to see different parts of his personality, and through his actions and Gracie's visions to his past, you get to understand his actions and sympathize with him despite not supporting his actions or his motives. Other characters, such as one of the suspects, are characterized as suspicious enough to warrant motive. Still, then once they're taken into custody due to the investigation, we don't hear from them again. The detective on the case makes the aforementioned arrest, but we don't hear from him again after we discover that the suspect they have in custody isn't the kidnapper. One of my least favorite parts of this book is the relationships between some of the characters. It's established that Gracie has been living with her aunt and cousin, but she barely speaks to them. Eventually, Gracie's cousin Diego gives her a book to help her with her abilities. Then after that, Gracie is roping Diego into the investigation as if they've always got along. The character relationships are far from terrible, but it would have been nice to see some more build-up for them.
Overall, Premonitions is still an enjoyable read. The plot is engaging and one thing I really love is that Gracie's premonitions give her clues but she doesn't always know what they mean. I love that she still has to decipher the meanings and that she just doesn't know or see all and she happens to be wrong about the meanings at times. It would be easy to just spell things out with the visions but Premonitions doesn't take that route which helps keep the mystery alive. Character relationships could use work but there is a sequel to this book and I'm hoping they get more fleshed out in that one.
TL;DR- 3/5, the book is solid but it does have a few problems that older readers will pick up on. This book is for elementary/middle grades and it does well keeping the attention of it's intended audience and therefore I can recommend it.