The memory eater

Rebecca Mahoney

Book - 2023

Seventeen-year-old Alana Harlow must save her town from a memory-devouring monster.

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Subjects
Genres
Young adult fiction
Fantasy fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Razorbill 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
Rebecca Mahoney (author)
Physical Description
327 pages ; 22 cm
Audience
Ages 12 years and up.
HL590L
ISBN
9780593524602
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

A memory-eating monster lives in the caves of Whistler Beach, where tourists and locals pay to lose their unhappy memories. After her grandmother dies, 17-year-old Alana Harlow inherits the family business and the job of controlling the Memory Eater. But there are holes in Alana's memory: about her grandma's death, her breakup with her girlfriend, Charlie, and even about the secret of keeping the monster sealed in its prison. Those holes are bites--in the shape of the Memory Eater's teeth. Now, the monster is free, and the town's citizens turn to Alana to save both their memories and the local economy (which runs on the Memory Eater's services). But as Alana searches for the Memory Eater, she discovers secrets about her magic, her family history, and herself. Mahoney combines a touch of magic with a story of grief, loss, and growing up under the weight of a whole town's survival. This book will appeal to readers who enjoy small towns with a magical underbelly and monsters with a human side.

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

An orphaned teen striving to keep her family's business afloat propels this delicately crafted fantasy from Mahoney (The Valley and the Flood). For two centuries, the Harlow family has served as caretakers to the Memory Eater, a monster magically imprisoned in the caves of Whistler Beach. Now, 17-year-old Alana, a queer, white-cued overachiever, and the last Harlow in Whistler, has taken over the family business guiding clients into the monster's cave, where the customers' unwanted memories are offered as meals. Following an incident in the caves, Alana has been experiencing gaps in her memory, and when she can't recall the spell that keeps the monster contained, she realizes that these gaps aren't a result of a concussion--the Memory Eater has been sneaking bites out of her memory, and has now escaped. To save Whistler, Alana must figure out how to retrieve her memories from the creature by digging into her family's long-buried history, unearthing perilous secrets along the way. Via poetic prose, darkly ominous ambiance, and Alana's witty, undeniably teen voice, Mahoney movingly addresses themes of atoning for past mistakes, confronting intergenerational trauma, and overcoming grief in this unforgettable read. The supporting cast is intersectionally diverse. Ages 12--up. Agent: Kari Sutherland, KT Literary. (Mar.)

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

To the town of Whistler Beach, Maine, the Memory Eater -- a creature confined to a cave who consumes people's unwanted memories -- is big business. And that business depends on seventeen-year-old Alana Harlow. Like generations of Harlows before her, it's Alana's job to keep the Memory Eater in the cave and to make sure it feeds only on the memories clients offer. One day Alana makes a mistake that allows the monster to escape; starving, it attacks town residents, taking their memories without permission. (Alana knows the feeling: trying to recall a memory that the Memory Eater took is "like missing a stair. The swoop of air where solid ground should be. And then the drop.") With the help of her best friend and her ex-girlfriend (or, she'd prefer, not-so-ex-), Alana investigates the origins of the Memory Eater, uncovering a two-hundred-year-old family secret that connects them. It's a discovery that transforms her goal from subduing and controlling a monster to understanding it; in Mahoney's deliberate, evocative prose, the terror and guilt the character feels are slowly replaced by empathy and love. As in Laure's Remember Me (rev. 3/22), the fantasy element of removing a person's memories is intriguing but feels secondary -- here, it is Alana's willingness to experience her emotions, to receive others' pain, and to lean on her community for support that stand out. (c) Copyright 2023. 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

Just over 200 years ago, a ship arrived at a small seaside community in Maine carrying human passengers who had lost their memories--and the monster that had stolen them. Now, 17-year-old Alana Harlow, whose ancestor magically trapped the Memory Eater in sea caves, is the last Harlow in Whistler Beach. After her grandmother's death, Alana took on the responsibility of maintaining the Memory Eater's seal--rocks revealed at low tide that must be fed with blood from the Harlow family line. She also runs the family business, taking clients to the Memory Eater's cave to have unwanted memories removed and supervising the process to make sure each person emerges safely. After suffering a terrible accident in the cave a few months prior, Alana is desperate to prove herself to the town council, but when she realizes that gaps in her memory can't simply be attributed to trauma, she confronts the Memory Eater only for the creature to overwhelm her and escape from its prison. Central to this haunting, emotionally driven narrative are the mingled themes of grief, love, and selfishness, all of which bear down on Alana as she tries to fix her mistakes and shoulder her guilt alone. The cast members, who are diverse in race and sexual identity, are vividly drawn. White, bisexual Alana's relationships with her best friend and ex-girlfriend, both of whom support and care for her, are particularly compelling. An eerie tale offering equal measures of fright, angst, and emotional catharsis. (Fabulism. 13-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Josie ­Berenthal--​­the Atwoods' ­next-​­door neighbor and my family's most frequent ­customer--​­makes her slow, cautious way across the sand. She's a tall, spindly white woman with a pile of gray hair on top of her head and eyes almost as big as Lena's. Her arms are in the air like she's balancing on a rickety bridge. "You okay there, Josie?" I call, trying not to smile. "Just watching my footing, dear," Josie says. Her little electric lantern swings in her hand. "After what happened to you, you can't be too careful." I smile noncommittally. Whistler Beach is small, and my family has never exactly been low profile. But I try not to think of how horribly, publicly awful my February was. "I don't think we've seen you in a couple weeks now," I finally say. "I hope that means things are good?" "Would that it were so, dear," she says. "The gallery's been swamped; I couldn't make the time. Jimmy kept asking me when I'd make an appointment next, poor man. He says I need to clear my head." "Mm‑­hmm," I say. If I were Josie's husband, I'd be a little more worried that she was on her way to forgetting her own name next, but what do I know? "Oh!" Josie's gaze shifts next to me. "I didn't know you'd still be supervising, Lena." "Harlow family rules, Josie." Lena's smile is brittle. "You know how it is." "Yes, but that's if the family proves incapable , isn't it?" Josie rests a hand on my shoulder. "Alana slipped and fell. It could have happened to any of us." Somehow Lena manages to pat at my arm without looking at me. "No matter how capable she is, she's still recovering." "Josie," I say. Somehow I don't scream it. "We should probably get started." "Oh, of course! Ah, and before I forget." Josie hands over an envelope, thick with bills, along with a slip of folded notebook paper. "I hope this is going toward your college fund, Alana. Just because you have a business to run doesn't mean neglecting your education, you know?" I dodge that particular question with a smile and tuck the folded paper into my hoodie pocket. I won't need what's written there until after the session is finished. "Do you need me to walk you in?" "Oh, that's fine, dear." Josie laughs and hikes up her khaki shorts. "I know the way." Josie switches on her little electric lantern and sloshes into the cave, her bright green Crocs a cheery beacon in the dark. I make my own way into the water, directly opposite the cave mouth. When Grandma was alive, I was more ­laid-​­back about this. I could stay on the shore and read a book during sessions. But now that it's my responsibility alone, I prefer to watch. The little lantern light bobbles to the dry patch of rock near the seal. There's a beat. And finally, the slow uncurling of the boss's voice. "Josie. I was starting to miss you." "It's my busy season." Josie laughs again. "I suppose you know how that gets too, don't you?" "I suppose I do," the boss says. She likes the way Josie talks to her, like some slightly unorthodox hairdresser. "Why don't you tell me where I'm going today?" My fingers start to quiver where they're resting against my thighs. I don't have to watch every second. If anything goes wrong, the boss understands the consequences even better than I do. But lately, this job feels like walking down the stairs in the dark of an unfamiliar home. Like I can't gauge the width of the steps. "June seventeenth," Josie says. "Of this year." There's a brief, pointed silence. "That would be two days ago." "Does it matter?" Josie's ­good-​­natured voice sharpens to a bite. "It's a meal either way." "Trust me, you won't hear me complaining," the boss says dryly. "But one of these days you should ­try . . . sitting with it. See where that gets you." The wind whistles against the mouth of the cave. The boss stirs, like she's leaning in. "You know how this goes, Josie. When you close your eyes, you will no longer be here, in this cave. You'll be standing on the Whistler Beach boardwalk, looking down the long line of shuttered stalls. It is night. It is quiet. And you are alone." She lets that sit, a moment. "The tide is coming in. You can hear waves lapping against the beams under your feet. Time your breaths with those waves, Josie. Can you hear them? Can you feel them against the wood?" When Josie's reply comes, her voice is calm again. "I can." "Good." The boss's voice goes gentle, gentle. A voice you would hear and immediately trust. "Look back to the stalls. Imagine that each one represents a day in your life. A memory in your mind. The stalls nearest to you are your earliest days. The very last one is this moment, right now. Let's walk to June seventeenth of this year, Josie. Walk with me." Josie's breath evens; her chin bobs down to her neck. She's still awake, barely. But nothing can reach her now. Nothing except the sound of that voice. I try not to move. I don't know how easily the trance breaks, have never wanted to push it. I've never been where Josie is, after all: sitting in the pale circle of light, my mind laid bare and unprotected. (And I never will. It's yet another Harlow rule, one of the first. The boss's services are not for us. And they never can be.) "All right." I still can't quite see the boss. I just faintly see the dark of her outline expanding. "All right, Josie. That stall that represents June seventeenth of this ­year--​­picture it shrinking at your feet. Small enough to cup in your hands. Reach out and pick it up. Are you holding it?" Josie hums. She's beyond words now. After all these sessions, she goes deep fast. "Good," the boss says. "Hold it out to me." Josie shivers. Then slowly, she lifts both arms, palms up like an offering. Her hands are empty. Or they look empty, if you didn't know better. "You offer it to me freely?" The words are calm and even. But the boss pitches her voice up and out so that I can hear it clearly. It's for my benefit, after all. Josie hums, long and low. Slowly, the light of Josie's lantern shrinks around her. It flickers, hitching like breaths. Josie's fingers curl in a little as her hands are swallowed into the dark. But the set of her shoulders is relaxed. Peaceful. The click of the boss's claws against the rock floor stops. And I hear the smallest sigh. I hear the hunger in it. There is a creature hidden in the caves of Whistler Beach, held to the salt and sand by a spell and a deal struck on a stormy sea over two hundred years ago. She has no name that she's given us. My ­great-​­grandfather called her "the boss." Grandma always called her "our co‑­worker." But the people of Whistler ­Beach--​­and the clients who seek out our ­services--​­they have a different name for her. The little lantern flickers out. And just as I have for more than half my life, I listen to the Memory Eater take her first meal of the day. Excerpted from The Memory Eater by Rebecca Mahoney 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.