Spells for forgetting

Adrienne Young, 1985-

Book - 2022

"Emery Blackwood's life was forever changed on the eve of her high school graduation, when the love of her life, August Salt, was accused of murdering her best friend, Lily. Now, she is doing what her teenage self swore she never would: living a quiet existence among the community that fractured her world in two. She'd once longed to run away with August, eager to escape the misty, remote shores of Saiorse Island and chase new dreams; now, she maintains her late mother's tea shop and cares for her ailing father. But just as the island, rooted in folklore and tradition, begins to show signs of strange happenings, August returns for the first time in fourteen years and unearths the past that no one wants to remember. Augus...t Salt knows he is not welcome on Saiorse, not after the night that changed everything. As a fire raged on at the Salt family orchard, Lily Morgan was found dead in the dark woods, shaking the bedrock of their tight-knit community and branding August a murderer. When he returns to bury his mother's ashes, he must confront the people who turned their backs on him and face the one wound from the past that has never healed-Emery. But the town has more than one reason to want August gone, and the emergence of deep betrayals and hidden promises that span generations threatens to reveal the truth behind Lily's death once and for all"--

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Subjects
Genres
Novels
Published
New York : Delacorte Press [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Adrienne Young, 1985- (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages ; cm
ISBN
9780593358511
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Generations of Blackwood women have lived on Saoirse Island, working spells from a spell book and herbarium passed down from mother to daughter. Fourteen years ago, Emery Blackwood tried to leave the island, but her attempt was thwarted by the tragic death of her best friend, Lily. The circumstances surrounding Lily's death are mysterious--she was found in the middle of a fire in the island's orchard, drowned by seawater. The close-knit islanders believe that the person behind Lily's death was August Salt, Emery's boyfriend, who conveniently left town with his mother soon after. Now August has returned to bury his mother's ashes, reopening old wounds and bringing long-buried secrets to the surface. In her adult debut, Young spins a tale of an insular community struggling to come to terms with the past. Although much of the story is told from Emery's perspective, Young includes chapters told from the point of view of other islanders, showing their reactions to August's return as well as the long-standing mystery of Lily's death. The twists, turns, and hints of magic will appeal to fans of Alice Hoffman's Practical Magic series.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Young's atmospheric adult debut (after the Fable YA duology), "deep magic" runs in the women of Saoirse, a fictional island in Puget Sound. After high school graduation, Emery Blackwood hopes to move away with her boyfriend, August Salt, but when the island's orchard burns to the ground on the same night that Emery's best friend, Lily Morgan, is mysteriously killed, their plans to leave the next morning are aborted. All signs point to August as the culprit behind Lily's death, but there's not enough evidence to charge him, and he and his mother flee Saoirse, leaving Emery to take over her family's tea shop, which dispenses "mystical brews" to help with love and luck. Now, 14 years later, August returns to Saoirse to bury his mother and sell her cottage. August's return raises questions about what actually happened all those years ago, and it appears every islander is hiding a piece of the puzzle. The plot is convoluted, but Young entrances with the island's witchy vibes, and makes palpable the unfinished childhood love story between Emery and August, which comes back to life after his return. Despite the bumps, Young casts a spell that will keep readers turning the pages. Barbara Poelle, Irene Goodman Literary. (Sept.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Debut adult novel from the bestselling author of The Last Legacy (2021) and Namesake (2021). August Salt was 18 when he was accused of murdering his friend Lily Morgan. No longer welcome on Saoirse, the tiny Pacific Northwest island where they lived, he and his mother moved to the mainland, changed their last name, and started a new life. Fourteen years later, his mother's insistence that her ashes be buried on her ancestral home sends him back to a place he didn't expect to see again. For most of Saoirse's residents, his return is unwelcome. For Emery Blackwood, it stirs up feelings she's spent her whole adult life trying to suppress. An isolated community, an unsolved mystery, long-buried secrets coming to light: This is a classic setup for psychological suspense or gothic horror, and this story offers a bit of both. But it also offers a little something extra: The women of Saoirse are witches. Young has written several young adult novels full of invention, adventure, and sorcery. By the end of this novel, though, it's hard to escape the conclusion that she decided writing for grown-ups means combining a dour, lifeless tone with a plot that barely moves. And there's something almost perverse about a narrative with a witch protagonist being so miserly with magic. The central tensions driving the story are pretty simple. Neither Emery nor August has ever recovered from the abrupt end of their youthful romance. Lily's murderer has never been found. The people of Saoirse are worried that August will try to reclaim the orchard that his grandfather left to the community. Saoirse is a place unlike any other. The most compelling of these--the mystery surrounding Lily's death, the unique nature of the island--get the least attention. August and Emery only decide to investigate their friend's murder late in the novel. And, despite every first-person narrator here assuring us that Saoirse is a singular place with its own rules, the island comes across like any other small, insular place that depends on a seasonal tourism industry--sporadic acts of witchcraft notwithstanding. Hovers awkwardly between YA fantasy/romance and magical realism for grown-ups. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

One AUGUST There were tales that only the island knew. Ones that had never been told. I knew, because I was one of them. I stood at the bow of the ferry as Saoirse emerged from the mist like a sleeping giant tucked into the cold waters. The biting wind had numbed my fingers clutched around the railing and they tightened as I swallowed. I'd imagined that moment a thousand times, even on days that I wasn't completely convinced the island had ever existed. But there it was, as real as the skin that covered my bones. I tucked my hands into the pockets of my jacket, turning my back to the sight of it. As if that would somehow erase all the darkness that had happened there. The last time I'd stood on the deck of that ferry, I was eighteen years old, and instead of watching it grow bigger in the distance, I'd watched it disappear, along with the life I'd lived there. My mother had kept her face turned away from me just enough to hide the tears striping her reddened cheeks, but I could feel in the center of my chest the words she wasn't saying. That I'd f***ed everything up. And that deep down, she would never forgive me for it. My eyes dropped heavily to the pack at my feet, where the smooth emerald face of the urn was visible through the cinched opening. Even in those final days, she'd never spoken a word of any of it. We swore we'd never go back to Saoirse, and we hadn't. That was one of many promises we'd kept. So why, after all these years, had she broken it? The only answer to that question was one I couldn't stomach. "Sir?" The voice was half drowned in the wind pouring over the deck and I blinked, squinting against the blinding morning light. A woman buttoned up in the heavy nylon coat that bore the emblem of the ferry charter stood before me, hand extended and waiting. "Your ticket?" "Oh, sorry." I reached into the bag slung over my shoulder, rooting around until I found it. Her hand brushed mine as she took the ticket, reading the stamp that marked the date and time. "Headed home?" Her pink nose stuck out from over the collar of the coat, her voice muffled. The word was like ice in my throat. Home. "What?" I stiffened, searching her face for any hint of recognition. But she was several years younger than I was, probably more. If she was from Saoirse, she wouldn't know my face. She definitely wouldn't know my name--not the one on the ticket. "Sorry, don't mean to pry. It's just . . ." She handed it back to me. "It's not a return ticket. Don't see many of those on this ferry." I cleared my throat, slipping the paper into my pocket. "I'm just visiting." The island wasn't home, even if it once had been. And she was right. No one came to Saoirse to stay. Though her mouth wasn't visible behind the scarf, I could see the frown in her eyes and the look edged too close to suspicion. I'd been given that look many times before. "Well"--her gaze trailed over my jacket and down to my boots before snapping back up to my face--"enjoy your trip." There was a stiff uneasiness in the way she stepped around me, following the railing down the deck. Beyond her, the island was now a sharp figure against the sky. A pair of white gulls glided over jagged black cliffs, catching the freezing wind that had carved the land into the shape of hungry teeth. It didn't matter how many years had passed, the memories hadn't faded. I'd grown up being told that the people on the mainland were different from us, but living among them was the first time I really understood it. Mom had gotten better through the years at blending in and appearing at first glance like other mothers. But she still spent the equinox in the woods and the solstice at the sea. She still whispered old words over her teacups and I'd caught her muttering a curse as we passed the front door of our neighbor's house more than once. It was clear almost as soon as we left Saoirse that she didn't want to talk about the island. That those years would be locked away in some secret place we pretended didn't exist. It wasn't the first time I'd broken my mother's heart. It wasn't the last, either. In a blink, a single moment, every summer in the orchard, every storm over the dark sea, every night in the fishing cabin was entombed inside me like a body beneath a shroud, sealed away from the sunlight. It was for that very reason that I hadn't believed it when I read the handwritten letter folded into the will, just days after I watched my mother take her last breath. After so many years of staying away, of never speaking of the place, she'd parted this world with only one wish--that her ashes be buried on Saoirse Island. It had taken me four months to actually book a flight to Seattle so I could make good on her request. I'd closed the window shade as we landed, my heart in my throat. I didn't want to see the listless chain of black islands in the distance or the silvery blue of the water that only existed in the Sound. There were things that the taste of the salt-laced wind resurrected, whether I wanted it to or not, and I was already dreading the months or years it would take to put those memories back to bed. My phone buzzed beneath my jacket and I pulled it from my back pocket, squinting as I read Eric's name on the screen. I let out a heavy exhale before I picked up my pack, hauling it onto one shoulder. I tapped to answer. "Hey." "You make it?" I pushed through the doors to the ferry's linoleum-floored cabin, where green bucket seats were set in fixed rows. Behind the counter in the corner, a short man with a stained white apron draped over a thick fleece stood awkwardly, watching me over a stainless-steel coffee maker. "Just about." I ducked low to glance out the hazy window, where the sunlight was a smear of white on the scratched glass. "Well, I got your message. All you're really looking for is any important paperwork that might have been left there. You'll need the deed to the house in order to sell it. Titles, marriage licenses, bank accounts, whatever. And we need to get someone local to handle the sale unless you want to get stuck going back and forth to deal with all of this." Eric's gruff voice on the other end of the line was a tightly pulled tether between this world and another--my simple life in Portland and my less than simple history on Saoirse. "Any other loose ends there?" I bit down, following the stark outline of the island with my eyes until it disappeared into the sea. There were a hundred different ones I could think of, but only one I gave a shit about. "No. The orchard was taken care of in Henry's will." I answered, my voice catching just slightly on my grandfather's name. I hadn't spoken it in years. "It's just the house. Maybe a few pieces of old farm equipment left on the property or something." "When do you have to be back to class?" Class. I hadn't thought about my classroom on campus for weeks, and the view of the orange-hued wooden risers in the light streaming through the tall arched windows made me feel even farther away. "Not until next semester. I took a leave to take care of my mom." "That's right." His tone shifted just slightly. "Well, get all of this sorted and then get the hell out of there." "That's the plan." I breathed, eyeing the windblown faces that filled the deck outside. It was almost the end of the season, but there were still dozens of tourists on the early ferry, headed for the orchard. "And Eric?" "Yeah?" I lowered my voice. "Thanks for your help with all of this." "Pretty handy when your college roommate turns out to be a lawyer." He half-laughed. "Anyway, I'm sure I owe you for one thing or another." But he wasn't just a college roommate. He was a friend. Maybe the only one I had. He was also the only person I'd ever told about Saoirse Island, even if I'd never uttered a word about what happened there. "I mean it. Thanks." "You can buy me a beer when you get back." He paused. "How's that?" "Sure thing." The door opened again as I leaned into it, and I swallowed hard when I spotted the tipping masts of the boats in the harbor. "Better go. I'll probably lose service any minute." "See you next week." "Bye." The ferry horn rang out as I hung up, and I pushed back out onto the deck. Below, the bow of the ship was carving through the dark blue sea, churning up a splitting trail of white foam on either side of the vessel. I wanted to hate my mother in that moment, as I felt the deep grow shallower, the island creeping closer. I wanted to be angry or think her selfish for sending me back here. But I owed her this. After everything, the very least I owed her was this. A few days, and then I was gone. I could turn my back on the island like I had fourteen years ago. But this time, I would never go back. I'd lived enough years now to know that there were some ghosts that haunted you forever. Saoirse had secrets, yes. But so did we. Excerpted from Spells for Forgetting: A Novel by Adrienne Young 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.