Fiction / Fantasy
254 pages / 475 KB
5 Stars
I had a hard time putting it down. Yes, it's YA, but it is
suitable for any adults who enjoy a good fantasy about Weres. It's not filled
with teen angst, or lust, or horny were-wolves, it's about a family of Randoms.
Like all weres, Randoms change with the full moon, usually
starting about age 15, but they don't necessarily become true within a family.
The first time they change, they change on the last warm- blooded animal they see
as they change. Jazz's father is a cat, her mother a chicken. Jazz's sister,
Celia was a cat, and Jazz? Well, she's a surprise. A true Random. A Wild Card
in the mix.
Celia and Mal were youngsters when their family is forced to
leave the Old Country and come to the New Country. As Shape-shifters, they were
forced into being second class citizens, they were ostracized and during the
three days of the full moon cycle, they were locked away, either in Turning
Houses or in state approved rooms in their own homes where they turned from
human to whatever.
Celia, the oldest child, spoke with an accent, and was
quiet, intelligent, and gangly. She was bullied, not only by her peers, but by
her teachers. The bullying and resulting emotional upheaval forced her to
change, in public, in full view of everyone, which made the bullying worse. She
dies before graduation, forced into it by one of her teachers.
Mal, younger, becomes angry and sullen, and Jazz, the baby,
born in the New Country, is pulled out of school, and taught at home. She is
protected from everyone. Her parents guard her, determined she will not be
taken from them as Celia was.
Slightly before she changes for the first time, she finds
Celia's diaries, and makes some startling discoveries that neither her parents
nor her sullen older brother know. When she changes into something impossible,
the family is thrown into fits, and it comes out that she knows about the
death, and it was not suicide, as her parents thought, but accidental.
This story is a great story about teens who are
"different" and coming of age, dealing with that difference, be it
skin color, accent, or whatever. It's a good story on the damage that bullying
causes, and how many students who are bullied do not report it, and why. And it's
not always peers who do the bullying. It's about how people are turned into
second class citizens, often with their agreement, though not their approval.
Alma Alexander has written a marvelous story, and frankly,
I'm delighted that Wolf, #2 in the series is out, but I'm not gonna be happy
when I finish it and have to wait for #3.
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