The things she's seen

Ambelin Kwaymullina, 1975-

Book - 2019

The ghost of a girl who recently died in an accident makes contact with her grieving father to help solve a mystery in a remote Australian town, where a girl who speaks entirely in riddles is the only witness to a fatal fire.

Saved in:
Subjects
Genres
Detective and mystery fiction
Paranormal fiction
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Ambelin Kwaymullina, 1975- (author)
Other Authors
Ezekiel Kwaymullina, 1983- (author)
Edition
First American edition
Item Description
"A Borzoi Book."
Physical Description
197 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
HL590L
ISBN
9781984848789
9781984849373
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

One way to heal is through storytelling. As Catching knows, it is stories that get you through and bring you home. Sibling authors Ambelin and Ezekiel Kwaymullina pack an astonishing amount of storytelling and intensity in their relatively short novel. Beth's story begins right after her death from an automobile accident. Since Beth's father, a police officer, is left to grieve alone, Beth finds herself still stuck on the mortal side of death, unable to interact with anyone but him. Until, that is, she discovers a key witness in the arson case that has brought them to the remote Australian town can see her. In between Beth's narration are chapters told in verse from the point of view of Isobel Catching, a girl who has a heartbreaking but vital story to tell that ultimately reveals an evil embedded deep within the town's roots. Devastatingly beautiful magical realism drives Isobel's poems and sheds much needed light on the history of abuse perpetrated against aboriginal girls.--Caitlin Kling Copyright 2019 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 7 Up--Beth Teller is dead. A biracial Aboriginal Australian, she was recently killed in a car accident, and now only her detective father can see her. Beth feels she needs to guide her father through his grief and help him reconnect with some of their family from whom he disconnected after her death. Soon, a case takes them to a small Australian town where a fire has left one person dead and multiple people missing. A witness, Isobel Catching, has a very interesting story to tell. As Beth helps her father through the investigation, they realize things aren't what they seem and question Isobel's reliability, while making realizations about themselves along the way. The narration by Miranda Tapsell feels authentic and she smoothly transitions between points of view. The elements of magical realism are reminiscent of The Life of Pi. VERDICT Fans of thrillers with deeper social themes will enjoy this mysterious, intriguing, and well-narrated audiobook.--Megan Huenemann, Norris High School, Firth, NE

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Horn Book Review

Tapsell provides a gripping performance of the Kwaymullinas' Australia-set crime story about a mysterious fire at a children's home, which is being investigated by a grieving detective, a most unlikely sidekick (his deceased daughter, now a ghost), and a mysterious witness named Isobel Catching. The narrator is adept at modulating her voice to fit two distinct female points of view while capturing a wide range of diction, from teenaged defiance to suspenseful whispers to horrified realizations. The surprising ending turns this expertly narrated edge-of-your-seat thriller into a captivating metaphorical story of the historical separation of children from their Aboriginal families. An author's note touches on Aboriginal storytelling methods. Julie Hakim Azzam November/December 2019 p.126(c) Copyright 2019. The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

(c) Copyright The Horn Book, Inc., a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Beth Teller may be a ghost, but she is hoping to solve a mystery and heal her father's broken heart. Beth is a biracial Aboriginal (no nation is specified) girl from Australia who remembers very little about the car accident that took her life. She can't fathom why her spirit hasn't moved on, but she suspects it might have something to do with her love for her grieving white father. He's a detective who always did right by her mother and siblings after being rejected by his own parents when he fell in love with an Aboriginal woman. Dedicated to serving justice, her dad has fallen into a deep depression after Beth's death. When he finally heads back to work, he must investigate a possible arson: the charred remains of a children's home. What Beth and her father find are secrets far more complicated than the mere burning of a building. A legacy of violence sits at the heart of this important novel, yet artful language softens the blows of pain and fear. The only interviewee the two detectives can consult is a witness who speaks in riddles: Isobel Catching. Who is she, and what does she know? Crimescommon yet unspeakablerise to the surface in this fast-paced thriller with a supernatural bent.An #ownvoices story that empowers its female heroines, giving them pride in their lineage and power in remembering. (Thriller. 13-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

My dad looked like crap. His blond hair was flat and grubby, and his skin seemed too big for his bones. The muscly, tanned guy who'd built me a two-story tree house when I was a kid had been replaced by a pale shell of a man who didn't build anything. You'd think it would be me who looked different. Dad said I didn't. I couldn't tell, since I didn't cast a reflection anymore. But if I looked the same, then the face smiling out from the pictures on the walls of our house must still be my face: curly dark hair, round cheeks, brown skin like Mum's, and blue eyes like Dad's. Only I didn't smile as much now.   Dad barely smiled at all.   He pressed his hand to his chest, out of breath from climbing up this rocky hill. There were a bunch of rock formations like this one around here, rising up from a flat red plain that was dotted with trees. I liked the trees. They were old and white and twisty, spiraling upward to fling out their leaves as if they were hoping to touch the sky. I liked the sky too; there seemed to be more of it here than in the city. There were no buildings to block it out. No big ones, anyway. We could see much of the town from where we stood: a sprawl of houses surrounded by the scattered trees, with a long river to the north. The town was covered in the same dust that coated everything, including our car and my dad's rumpled shirt and pants. The dust hadn't touched my clothes, of course. My dress would always be as yellow and crisp as it had been on the day Aunty Viv drove me to the birthday party.   Dad took a step closer to the edge of the hill, gazing outward.   "I don't think you're going to solve the case from up here," I told him.   His gaze shifted in my direction. His eyes were bright with tears. Sometimes he couldn't even look at me without sobbing. Today the tears didn't fall. But I could hear them in his voice when he said, "I miss you, Beth."   "I'm right here, Dad."   Except we both knew I wasn't. At least, not in the way he wanted me to be.   The accident had happened so fast. One minute I'd been sitting in Aunty Viv's sedan, everything normal. Then I'd heard the four-wheel drive plowing through the bushes as it tore down the embankment. I'd looked up to see it hurtling at me, and . . . nothing. I didn't remember the actual dying part.   In fact, I felt as if I was still a living, breathing girl. Right now, for instance, I could see the town, hear the wind, smell the eucalyptus from the trees, and taste the gritty dust. I just couldn't touch any of it.           This wasn't how I'd imagined being dead, not that I'd ever spent much time thinking about it. But Mum had died when I was just a baby, and her two sisters--Aunty Viv and Aunty June--had always told me I'd see her again. Aunty June reckoned that Mum was "on another side." Her husky voice echoed through my memory: This world's got a lot of sides, like those crystals your Aunty Viv hangs in her window, and your mum's just on a different side to us. So I'd always figured that when I passed over to another side, Mum would be there to meet me.   She hadn't been. But I sometimes had a sense that she was waiting somewhere ahead--I'd be seeing her, I knew it. What I didn't know was exactly when. The when didn't matter so much, though, since I didn't count minutes or hours anymore. Days began when the sun rose and ended when it set. In between, the connections I made--like the ways I helped my dad, or didn't help him--were what told me if I was moving forward or backward. As my Grandpa Jim had once said to me, Life doesn't move through time, Bethie. Time moves through life.   Dad was staring at me with the lost expression I'd come to hate. I waved encouragingly at the town. "Why don't you go investigate?"   He stared for a moment longer. Then he turned away and wiped at his eyes, focusing his attention on the houses below us.   "I am investigating. I'm getting a sense of the place." His voice was raspy. He drew in a deep breath, and added in a more even tone, "It reminds me of where your mum and I grew up." His mouth twisted as if he'd tasted something bad. "Local police officers can have a lot of power in a place like this."   He was thinking about his father. My grandpa on Dad's side--who I'd never actually met--had been a cop for thirty years, and he wasn't a good guy. Dad said his old man thought the law was there to protect some people and punish others. And Aboriginal people were the "others."   Grandpa and Grandma Teller had thrown Dad out when he started seeing Mum, and they'd never wanted anything to do with me, their Aboriginal granddaughter.   "Do you think there are police like your dad in this town?" I asked.   "Maybe. Maybe not. Places like this are changing. Places everywhere are changing. Slowly, but it's happening." He sighed and shook his head. "I'm just not sure there's anything here to investigate."   I didn't like the sound of that. I needed Dad to be interested in this case. My father was stuck in grief like a man caught in a muddy swamp. I had to get him to walk forward until he'd left the mire behind. Otherwise he'd just keep sinking until the water swallowed him.   "Someone did die in that fire," I pointed out.   That was why Dad was here, because an inferno had engulfed a children's home and killed . . . well, somebody. The body had been burned too badly to identify, so the cops were working on getting DNA or dental records to find out who it was. But at least it wasn't one of the kids.   They'd all escaped, which I was glad about; the littlest was only ten, same age as my cousin Sophie.   "You can't give up on this case before you even know who's dead," I told him.   "The only people living in that place besides the kids were the home's director and the nurse. So it's likely one of them," Dad replied. "Probably the nurse, because he was tall, and so is our corpse."   "Then what happened to the director?" I demanded. "There were no other bodies, so he can't be dead. Which means he's vanished. Very mysteriously."   "The local police might have found him in the time it took us to drive here," Dad said. "Don't go overcomplicating this, Beth. The fire was likely accidental, remember."   "You don't know that for certain! The faulty wiring is only a . . . What did they call it? 'Preliminary assessment'?"   Dad snorted. "Preliminary or not, the local cops could've handled all of this. At least until there was more information." He gave a frustrated shake of his head. "I've only been sent here because of Oversight."   Oversight was the name of an initiative the government had introduced after a series of bungled murder investigations. Whenever there was a possible homicide, an experienced senior detective had to look things over to make sure it was all being done right. Dad had lots to say about how the money put into Oversight should've been spent on more resources and better training instead.   Except Oversight wasn't really why he was here. Dad's boss, Rachel, thought Dad was still grieving and not ready for anything too difficult yet. I knew because I'd followed Dad around the police station and listened to what people were saying after he'd left a room. Rachel had figured she was doing him a favor by giving him an easy assignment. She was wrong. My father needed a real mystery. Something to solve. Something to do. Excerpted from The Things She's Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina, Ezekiel Kwaymullina All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.