Steele Secrets may have been written a few years back, but boy is it as much of an appropriate read now as much as it was then. It may be a specifically American tale, but it's one that resonates regardless.
Mary Steele was just an ordinary girl... Until the moment she found herself standing in a field outside her school, blank stone markers around her, and no idea of how she got there. Then there's Moses. He is a ghost. He was a slave. And for some reason there are people out there who want to erase his existence from history, with bulldozers and legal injunctions if necessary. Not one to take injustices lying down, Mary ropes in friends and family to discover the history of the stone markers. It turns out that it's not just the field; the whole town is full of secrets waiting to be unearthed.
Firstly, Mary is an amazing narrator. I have never empathised more with a YA lead. She's average, nice enough, reasonably good in school, not looks obsessed or boy crazed (she's got a crush of course, but she's not checking out his toned abs or whatever YA girls usually do), and with a good friend or two looking out for her. She's snarky but in a real way. The only way I could have loved her (and the modern day cast) more would be if her slice-of-life story alongside the main mystery could have been better developed. A few things like relationships between character just... happened. I wished it could have had more airtime to grown.
Secondly, this story has heart. It highlights the legacy of slavery in a touching, poignant way. It's YA appropriate, though it won't shy away from the darker side of things either. It pushed historical fact to the forefront, as well as showing a realistic representation of how both liberal and conservative views clash on the matter. It's not all rose-tinted glasses about either the historical or present day society values which is so refreshing. If anything, the sadness in the book reinforces the need to take action yourself. It's a YA primer in looking at white privilege.
The magical realism/fantasy element to it is both a blessing (because it gives us Moses' voice) and a curse (because some things are never really explained... like popping up in a field, or how people just shrug off the existence of ghosts). That initial part of the story does feel a tad rushed, details brushed over, but once it gets going the mystery takes the lead.
While it's not overly deep in terms of developing characters, it's the story within the story that pushes you to read on. Mary's tale of self discovery is a little under-represented, but for a social issues based YA it does a good job of shedding light on difficult attitudes. One for our times indeed.
-I received a free copy of this ebook in a giveaway-