Junie A novel

Erin Crosby Eckstine

Book - 2025

"A strong-willed enslaved girl is haunted by her sister's ghost as she grapples with circumstances beyond her control, risking her life as the Civil War looms in this lush and tenderhearted debut. Junie has always yearned for more. Born and raised on the Bellereine plantation in the Alabama countryside, the sixteen-year-old spends her days working for the McQueens and serving as a maid for their daughter Violet, her oldest and closest friend. In the daytime, she entertains herself with poetry and imagines grand romances and faraway worlds. Under the cover of night, she steals away to the woods, curling up by the riverbank. But consumed by grief over the recent death of her older sister Minnie, she has vowed never to leave her fami...ly's side. Her world is capsized at the arrival of the Taylors, a wealthy brother and sister from New Orleans. The McQueens are keen to marry Violet off to Mr. Taylor, and if they succeed, Junie would be ripped away from everyone she knows and loves. Committing a desperate act, she awakens Minnie's tempestuous spirit, who can only move on once Junie completes three crucial tasks. She enlists the aid of Caleb, Mr. Taylor's chauffeur, and the two strike up a quick friendship that soon becomes something more. Yet time is ticking, and as secrets and betrayals rise to the surface, Junie must wade into unfamiliar territory as she pushes against the current that has controlled her entire life. Encapsulating the multitudes of a young girl caught between the steadiness of the familiar and the gamble of diving into the unknown, Erin Crosby Eckstine explores the strength of love and friendship under the crushing weight of servitude. In this radiant and stirring novel, Junie soars to life, brimming with longing that cannot be contained and hope that can never be extinguished"--

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FICTION/Eckstine Erin
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1st Floor New Shelf FICTION/Eckstine Erin (NEW SHELF) Due Feb 27, 2025
Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Ghost stories
Novels
Published
New York : Ballantine Books [2025]
Language
English
Main Author
Erin Crosby Eckstine (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
361 pages ; 25 cm
ISBN
9780593725115
Contents unavailable.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

In Eckstine's finely crafted debut, an enslaved teen girl uncovers secrets about her family in 1860 Alabama. Junie labors with several relatives on a plantation, which is being run into the ground by its alcoholic owner, William McQueen. When Junie's older sister, Minnie, dies of fever after rescuing Junie from a river she'd fallen into, she's wracked with guilt. Junie serves as maid to William's 17-year-old daughter, Violet, whom William and his wife hope will marry wealthy Louisiana cotton merchant Beauregard Taylor. Junie learns that if the marriage goes through, she'll be forced to accompany Violet to New Orleans and leave her family behind. Distraught, she makes a late-night visit to Minnie's grave. When she opens the small jar of Minnie's favorite things left there by her relatives, she inadvertently summons Minnie's ghost. It turns out Minnie is caught in the In-Between, which holds the spirits of Black people who have left their earthly missions undone. Minnie asks Junie to help free her spirit by locating a small box she has hidden in the plantation house. Junie succeeds, and finds evidence that her family and the McQueens are linked in ways she never imagined, which, along with news of Violet's engagement, drive her desire to escape. The complex plot and righteous protagonist will keep readers turning the pages. Eckstine evokes the earthly and supernatural to equally powerful effect in this richly layered tale. (Feb.)

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Review by Kirkus Book Review

On the eve of the Civil War, an enslaved Black teen awakens her sister's ghost and embarks on a dangerous journey to freedom in this debut novel. For 16-year-old Junie, the cotton plantation of Bellereine in Lowndes County, Alabama, is the only home she's known. In the summer of 1860, the enslaved teenager spends her days working as a house servant with her bossy cousin, Bess, and tending to the needs of Violet McQueen, the redheaded only daughter of the plantation's white owners. Junie illicitly wanders the local woods at night, mourning her recently deceased older sister, Minnie. It was Minnie who had tried to curb Junie's carefree spirit, which was a source of tension among older relatives fearful of drawing unwanted attention from the master. The arrival of the wealthy Taylor siblings from Louisiana suggests the possibility of a match for Violet and exile for Junie as Violet's maid. To avoid this catastrophe, Junie commits a desperate act that raises Minnie's ghost from the grave and propels Junie down a dangerous path toward liberation. Drawing on her own family's history as outlined in a note at the end of the book, Eckstine offers a compelling portrait of the psychological, emotional, and social degradations of slavery. If Junie is naive about her status in the novel's early chapters, she grows determined and resilient as she realizes the true nature of her "friendship" with Violet and the impossibility of her life as an enslaved person on the plantation. Clunkers (characters "smirk" at least nine times) and anachronistic language (Violet curses like a sailor) occasionally mar the lush prose, but Eckstine is a talented writer to watch. Featuring a spirited protagonist, this compelling mix of the historical and the supernatural will resonate. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.