Portrait of a shadow

Meriam Metoui

Book - 2024

"A missing sister. A mysterious boy. And a painting that holds the truth beneath its peeling edge... Inez is missing, but missing things can always be found. Mae knows this as a fact, even though the police investigation has come to a standstill, even though her parents are moving on. But when she goes to clear out her older sister's studio, she finds a mess of research and a white canvas that seems even older than the ornate frame it is set in. The closer Mae gets to the canvas, the more difficult it is to pull her eyes away from its mottled surface, its heavy layers of white paint, its peeling top corner she is tempted to pull to see what's beneath. But she doesn't. Not yet. Mae decides to trace her sister's last ...steps in the hopes of finding answers, certain that Inez's disappearance is related to the painting. And she knows she is desperate enough to let the strange boy who claims to have been Inez's neighbor tag along. Even if his good looks don't help distract from his avoidance of her questions. So begins a scavenger hunt piecing together what they can find from what Inez left behind. One that leads to centuries-old questions best left unasked and secrets best kept in the dark. From the author of A Guide to the Dark comes another romantic and eerie mystery about the lengths we are willing to go for the truth and the ones we love"--

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Subjects
Genres
Horror fiction
Detective and mystery fiction
Novels
Published
New York : Henry Holt and Company 2024.
Language
English
Main Author
Meriam Metoui (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
244 pages ; 22 cm
ISBN
9781250863270
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

When 18-year-old Mae offers to pack up her sister Inez's apartment, she has an ulterior motive. Inez, an art-history master's student, has been missing for seven months; Mae is sure the police missed evidence. With her Tunisian parents' reluctant blessing, Mae makes the three-hour trip, only to find someone else in Inez's apartment: Dev, Inez's Indian American neighbor, who claims to be watering her plants. Together, they search the apartment, finding a hidden journal that details the history of a particular white painting--and contains an enigmatic clue: "the answer lies in darkness." The obsessiveness of this journal worries Mae, especially when they find the painting in the closet with a business card for a Boston art dealer. This leads them to prior owners of the painting--who also mysteriously disappeared. Metoui doles out the history of the painting slowly, intensifying the unease with interludes that track the painting, and the malevolent presence that accompanies it, through time. Mae's dogged need to discover the truth fuels this suspenseful paranormal thriller about selfish greed, leading to an ambivalent but thought-provoking ending.

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

Eighteen-year-old Mae Mansour is the only person who believes that her disappeared older sister Inez is still alive. Seizing the opportunity to escape her overbearing parents, Mae drives from rural Pennsylvania to clean out her sister's Brooklyn apartment. There, she meets Inez's charming neighbor Dev, who offers to help Mae investigate Inez's vanishing. As they scour the apartment for clues, Mae finds a painting--entirely white except for a tantalizing curl of paint peeling from the corner--and a notebook detailing the work's sordid history. Unwilling to let this lead slip away, Mae and Dev embark on an impromptu road trip to solve the mystery of the painting, during which they become embroiled in a sinister paranormal plot whose origin spans decades. Metoui (A Guide to the Dark) wields frequent flashbacks rendered in sensorial prose to craft a tightly paced thriller that deftly touches on issues of forced cultural assimilation and parental pressure. Though the ending may leave readers with more questions than answers, Metoui delivers a tale of love, obsession, and betrayal that's a wild ride from start to finish. Mae's parents are from Tunisia; Dev is of Indian descent. Ages 14--up. Agent: Jennifer March Soloway, Andrea Brown Literary. (July)

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Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 8 Up--Mae's sister, Inez, went missing over six months ago; the police and her parents have given up on finding her, and the trail has gone cold. But Mae is haunted by memories of her sister and stubbornly refuses to believe she is really gone. When she arrives at her sister's Brooklyn apartment to clear out her things, she not only meets Inez's mysterious and attractive neighbor, but also finds a large white painting in the space. The paint is peeling, and it is in an old and ornate frame, but, most importantly, there is something off about it--Mae isn't sure what. What follows is a mysterious unraveling of the painting and the people who have owned it in the past and a quest to find out what actually happened to Inez. Metoui's second novel is atmospheric and tense, with plenty of twists and turns, and is well paced and engaging. VERDICT A thoroughly engrossing novel, with a satisfying plot and enough mystery to stay up all night reading, sure to cause goosebumps.--Tara Peace

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

A girl's search for her missing sister peels back a deeper mystery. Inez moved to Brooklyn five years ago to get her master's in art history, but she's been missing since December, and now it's July. Eighteen-year-old Mae has volunteered to pack up Inez's apartment, and so their Tunisian immigrant parents give Mae their car for the three-hour drive to New York from their small-town Pennsylvania home. When Mae arrives, she's surprised to encounter Indian American Dev, the neighbor boy who's ostensibly watering the dead plants in her sister's studio. For his part, Dev is surprised to learn that Inez has a sister. What other secrets might Inez have kept? As she searches the apartment, Mae comes upon an 1891 first edition of The Picture of Dorian Gray, Inez's diary hidden under the floorboards, and, in the back of a closet, an all-white painting like the one Inez has been researching, along with a business card for a Boston art dealer. Mae is sure this painting is somehow connected to her sister's disappearance, and Dev offers to help with her search. He's attractive, and he knows a side of Inez that Mae doesn't, so she agrees. Still, he's not exactly forthcoming with information, giving her half answers rather than complete truths. Masterfully written, this is a deceptively charming horror story that also skillfully weaves in romance, sacrifice, and heartbreak. Thrilling intrigue that leverages desperation and deception in almost equal measures. (Paranormal romance. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.