Just what has Isobel Catching seen? What does it mean?
After dying in a car accident, Beth can't bear to leave her father behind. The more his survivor guilt causes him to pull away from his loved ones, the worse he gets. Beth convinces him to take on a case in hopes of helping him move on, and be a detective again. What was supposed to be an open and shut case about a fire at a troubled children's home leads them to a girl with a story that sounds like a fantasy. However, the tale she tells reveals truths that are far more unsettling then any of them foresaw.
A story of two girls unwraveling two distinct pains, tied together by the threads they can't yet see. A tale of bonds beyond the barriers of life and death.
Trigger warnings for death, survivor's guilt, grief, mention of drug use, and racism.
Protective and persistent, Beth was loyal to her father. Determined to help him move on, she couldn't bear to leave him behind, but yet she couldn't bear to see him not move on. Given her sympathetic and extremely impulsive nature, she was very reactionary as she helped figure out what in the world was going on with Catching and the small town. At fifteen years old her voice read so young and a little naively brave, but it made her chapters even harder to read.
Straightforward yet secretive, Isobel Catching was unlike anyone else. Strange but strong, this resilient girl was very much her own person. She held a lot back, but she was able to change Beth's entire future. Told in verse and prose, her dark tale made me all the more intrigued to this fascinating character.
From familial to a bond far beyond friendship, Beth and Catching both held dearly to those that mattered most to them close. Between Beth being there for her father, and Catching never forgetting hers, family was never far from either girls' mind. The girls developed a relationship that was uniquely magical to them, rooted in grief and understanding. While we knew what had happened to Beth, but not Catching, each of them had been/were going through something deeply painful. I really ended up loving the dynamic that formed between Beth, her father, and Catching.
Do the dead ever really leave us? A stunning blend of paranormal mystery and magical realism, this centered around Aboriginal teens. A story of trauma, grief, and moving on, it also brought to light Aboriginal culture, history, and the horrific treatment they faced at the hands of colonizers. It definitely made me aware of a people I know far too little about. Disturbing, not enough people are aware of the racism they face. Through gorgeous storytelling, Ambelin Kwaymullina and Ezekiel Kwaymullina's emotionally devastating and healing tale came alive in vibrant color. Captivating from start to finish, this short book should be read over and over again in order to reveal every tenderly crafted layer.
This is a book that must be seen.