Wednesday, July 22, 2015

Review of The Accident Season by Moira Fowley-Doyle

The Accident Season
by Moira Fowley-Doyle

Release date: August 18, 2015
Kathy Dawson Books, 304 pages

Source: Penguin's First to Read eGalley



"For fans of We Were Liars and How I Live Now comes a haunting, sexy, magically realistic debut
about a famiy caught between a violent history, a taboo romance, and the mysteries lurking in their own backyard.  
Every October Cara and her family become inexplicably and unavoidably accident-prone. Some years it's bad, like the season when her father died, and some years it's just a lot of cuts and scrapes. This accident season--when Cara, her ex-stepbrother, Sam, and her best friend, Bea, are 17--is going to be a bad one. But not for the reasons they think. 
Cara is about to learn that not all the scars left by the accident season are physical: There's a long-hidden family secret underneath the bumps and bruises. This is the year Cara will finally fall desperately in love, when she'll start discovering the painful truth about the adults in her life, and when she'll uncover the dark origins of the accident season--whether she’s ready or not."- from Goodreads.com 

The short of it: 

Buried beneath a haze of magic and mystery lies a secret story that too many people know all too well. Spooky and sensual, The Accident Season is a must-read not just for lovers of the paranormal, but also for readers of contemporary YA fiction.

The long of it:

The Accident Season has something I don't see a lot in YA Lit: magical realism. While the novel was a pleasure to read as a supernatural mystery, what really bumped it an extra .5 stars for me was that underneath all the magic was the kernel of an ugly, all-too-real, truth. I won't say anything more, as slowly figuring out this truth was even more interesting to me as a reader than trying to figure out if the magic was real or if Cara was crazy.

The Accident Season is spooky and magical at every turn; somehow even the rhythm of the words is haunting, reminiscent of a chant. Main character Cara's life seems to exist outside everyone else's reality, replete with changelings, witches, Tarot cards, secrets collected by girls everyone forgets, red buttons in haunted houses, and of course, accidents that may not be accidents at all.

For US readers, the foreign Irish setting will lend a certain allure to the novel, and complement the feeling that magic is just at the edges of your vision, lurking in the shadows of the trees and the whispering of the river.

I think one of the things that really intrigued me about The Accident Season is that it didn't come out and say it's a paranormal mystery, but instead sort of danced around the subject, leaving so many possibilities open as to the origin of the accident season. I couldn't tell if "haunting" meant it was going to be a ghost story, because the accidents sounded like a fairy thing, and maybe there were witches too - and then I realized that it didn't matter to me what creature was responsible, because the story already appealed to me.

My rating? 4.5 out of 5 stars

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