Resurrection girls

Ava Morgyn

Book - 2019

Drawn out of her grief by new neighbors, the Hallas women, sixteen-year-old Olivia Foster perceives a darkness surrounding them that goes beyond Kara Hallas's habit of writing to men on death row.

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YOUNG ADULT FICTION/Morgyn Ava
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Subjects
Published
Chicago, Illinois : Albert Whitman & Company [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Ava Morgyn (author)
Physical Description
263 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 15+
ISBN
9780807569429
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

It's been three years since Olivia Foster's younger brother drowned in the family's swimming pool, an accident for which she feels responsible. She has lived in a veritable vacuum ever since. Now Olivia's 16, and her life changes when Kara Halles, along with her mother and grandmother, moves into the house across the street. Reckless, fearless Kara convinces Olivia to venture out and even join in Kara's pen-pal correspondences with lifer convicts. Fantasy and realism meld in the heat of the Houston summer as the teens wade deeper into drugs, alcohol, and lightly macabre activities; meanwhile, Olivia and her parents finally begin to emerge from their sorrow-induced hibernations. As hope begins to infiltrate their grief, things take a bizarre turn when the Halles women disappear as mysteriously as they had appeared. Debut author Morgyn began writing Resurrection Girls before her own daughter died, but spent the year following incorporating an understanding of the deep sorrow wrought by a child's death. It is a raw, captivating exploration of grief, friendship, and the reclamation of life.--J. B. Petty Copyright 2010 Booklist

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

Gr 9 Up--Sixteen-year-old Olivia Foster and her family have not moved on since her little brother Robby's death three years ago. Her mother numbs herself with pills, her dad is mysteriously absent, and Olivia lives in a fog believing her brother's death was her fault. Then the Hallas women move across the street. Sybil, the grandmother who is blind but sees everything; Rhea, the vibrant and full of life mother; and Kara, the daughter who lives exclusively in the moment. When Olivia and Kara become friends, Olivia begins to emerge from the world of death she lives in and re-enter the world of the living. As Kara introduces Olivia to her obsession of writing to inmates on death row, they become the Resurrection Girls: pen pals to murderers and serial killers. Magical realism and heartbreak collide in this tale of grief and rebirth. Olivia goes through the stages of grief as she works toward re-entering the world that is moving on without her. Kara helps Olivia work through her grief as well as re-introduce her to her childhood friend and current crush, Prescott. Different types of love are shown throughout the story as Olivia begins to experience feelings beyond friendship for Kara while still harboring her crush on Prescott. The Hallas family is mysterious and magical and readers are left to interpret exactly what their family secrets may be. While told through Olivia's perspective, all the characters are well written and fully fleshed out. VERDICT A thoughtful novel about overcoming grief perfect for readers who enjoy emotional stories.--Ashley Leffel, Griffin Middle School, Frisco, TX

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

Three years ago, Olivia Foster's 3-year-old brother, Robby, drowned in the backyard pool while she flirted with her crush, Prescott Peters.Since then, the pool has been filled in, her mother rarely emerges from her room, her dad's work hours have mysteriously gotten longer, and 16-year-old narrator Olivia occasionally raids her mother's prescription pill stash to dull her own pain and guilt as she assumes a lion's share of the responsibility at home. The scorching Houston summer takes a transformative turn when Kara Hallas moves into the long-vacant house across the street with her cigar-chomping maternal grandmother, Sybil, and flame-haired mother, Rhea. The wild and vibrant Kara is a magnet for everyone, including Prescott, whom Olivia has barely seen since Robby's death. Friendship, and maybe something more, blooms, and Kara convinces Olivia to help her write letters to death row inmates as the Resurrection Girls, claiming that they're giving them hope in their last days. A dark and unearthly something simmers in Kara that awakens a fire in Olivia and may be the key to finding a way out of the "endless parade of days" they've marched through like "automatons" since Robby's death. The lovely, assured prose draws on ancient archetypes and a lingering sense of dread to pave the way for a strange but satisfying conclusion. All characters are assumed white (the Hallas family are Greek American).Morgyn's supernaturally tinged debut is a heartbreaking but hopeful exploration of death and grief. (Magical realism. 13-18) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.