On the wings of la Noche

Vanessa L. Torres

Book - 2025

Seventeen-year-old Noche, who serves as an avian guide to the afterlife, suffers inner turmoil between falling for a new boy in town and letting go of her late girlfriend's soul.

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Alfred A. Knopf 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
Vanessa L. Torres (author)
Edition
First edition
Item Description
"This is a Borzoi book."
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 12 up.
ISBN
9780593426173
9780593426180
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Estrella "Noche" Villanueva is a Lechuza by night--she transforms into an owl and guides the souls of the dead into the beyond. Except for her girlfriend, Dante Fuentas, who died at 17 after drowning in a lake. Noche visits Dante's spirit every night, even as Dante grows forgetful, erratic, and confused. After being paired with new kid Jax as a lab partner, Noche finds herself unwillingly drawn to him. The more real her feelings for Jax become, the harder it is to keep Dante tethered to the earth, at great risk to both of them. Soon, Noche finds that the most loving thing to do might be to let go and set Dante's soul free, even if it means she can no longer visit her. Torres' sophomore work explores first love, grief, death, and what it means to move forward while carrying loss with you. Noche is an achingly lovable protagonist, and the exploration of her grief is equally haunting and beautiful. The relationships between Noche and Dante and Noche and Jax are complex and full of heart. The story expertly makes space for Noche's first love and loss of Dante without losing its hopeful center. This folklore-inspired story is sure to captivate anyone who has experienced loss and looked for hope.

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

Seventeen-year-old Estrella "Noche" Villanueva has been doing her solemn duty as a Lechuza for four years: at night, she shape-shifts into an owl and shepherds the souls of the dead into the beyond. Her already emotionally difficult job becomes impossible when her beloved girlfriend, Dante Fuentes, dies at 17. Rather than ushering her off this temporal plane, Noche leaves Dante's spirit to dwell on Earth, visiting her every night. For a while, it's just like old times, until Dante begins acting strange and forgetful and Noche starts falling for Jax Vang, the new boy at school. The situation soon turns untenable: Dante's odd behavior makes it difficult to keep their relationship--and her spirit--alive, Jax's own secrets prevent him from getting too close to others, and mysterious ravens start following Noche. For everyone to move on and move forward, Noche must release Dante's spirit. But can she let her go? This tearjerker by Torres (The Turning Pointe) is exceptional in its meditation on grief, healing, and the pain of moving on. Its poignant and in-depth portrayal of teenage love is sure to win readers' hearts. Characters are intersectionally diverse. Ages 12--up. Agent: Louise Fury, Fury Agency. (Jan.)

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

A young woman with a mythic duty struggles to let go in the wake of her girlfriend's death. Estrella "Noche" Villanueva is a Lechuza: She's a 17-year-old girl by day and a legendary black owl at night, responsible for escorting the souls of the dead to their next destination. Her girlfriend has been dead for two months, but Noche can't bring herself to say goodbye, and instead cherishes the stolen hours she spends with Dante's spirit on the icy banks of Lake Superior. As the rest of her Duluth, Minnesota, community mourns Dante's loss, Noche's extraordinary double life puts distance between her and her best friend, Julien. Meanwhile, a handsome new lab partner, Jax, brings confusion and warmth in equal measure as Noche finds herself drawn to a new flame despite her lingering grief. Torres tells the story with finesse, granting Noche both fragile youth and sturdy wisdom as she learns to navigate death. Noche's Mexican heritage and her sometimes isolating experiences as the granddaughter of immigrants are depicted with love and nuance. The story never underestimates the tenuousness of life and love but rather celebrates and honors these aspects of Noche's path to self-discovery. Julien is Sioux, Dante is Latine, and Jax is cued as Asian. A lyrical, tender, and insightful exploration of death, love, and the Mexican American experience.(Fantasy. 14-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

I Am I've never been afraid of the dark. Not even when I was little. I guess this should have been a sign of things to come--­the fact that my favorite part of the day has always been the night. I'd beg Papa and Ma to turn out the lights, bringing to life the shadows dancing across the walls and in my mind. I've never told them about the whispers inside my head that used to tingle the tips of my tiny fingers, urging my hands to reach for the stars speckling the sky outside my window. If I let myself think about it, I can't remember a time when I wasn't reaching--­and waiting, for that epic moment I have to believe is out there, the moment I will finally feel right in my skin. But like my affinity for the night, patience is something I've come to embrace. Especially now. Because as usual, I am enveloped by shadows, waiting for her. Tonight there is only a sliver of a moon, a thin fingernail scarring the winter constellations. My gaze rests on Orion in the north, his belt signaling winter is coming. I exhale a quick puff of air, the warm fog transforming to delicate crystals the moment it leaves my mouth. Winter is here, Orion--­it has been for months now in Duluth, Minnesota. I settle onto my spot, a flat section of a rigid downed tree. This is how our meetups always begin, with me so desperate to see her, all my well-­practiced patience flying out the window. Lake Superior's frozen edges are suspended in winter a few feet from my perch; the long swath of ice looks deceptively solid. I let my gaze settle on the place where the frosted crust transitions to the liquid fresh water. Thick, lazy waves lap at the edge of the freeze, a contrast to the sharp storm brewing inside my gut. This crescent of secluded shoreline surrounded by evergreens imprisons my grieving heart, and yet I come here every night, because I know she'll be here too. Just as I'm about to call for her, she emerges from the cover of the tree trunks, my Dante Fuentes in her winter running tights and sunrise-­orange jacket. When she sits next to me, breathing is overrated. My lungs take a second to relax; then I manage to draw in a slow inhale, wishing the cold wouldn't rob me of her scent. Thankfully, her aroma is stamped on my memory--­rosemary and mint, and sometimes sweet sweat. "How's my girl?" she asks, as if she can't tell I'm irritated she made me wait. "Your girl was on time," I answer. Dante runs her hand along the cold wood between us. "Hey, sometimes it's me doing the waiting, remember? I'm here now. Let's not waste time, huh?" Time. There will never be enough. Her soft grin works its charm. My shoulders ease up, and I melt against her aura. "What did you do today?" I ask, forever curious because I can't see her during the day. She crosses her legs, folding her hands in her lap. "Oh, you know, the usual." Nothing about this is usual, the two of us meeting in secret by Superior's shore in the middle of the night. But this is all we have now, and like so many other things, I must accept it and move on. I swivel to face her, my feet buzzing like live wires because I'm nervous to tell her what's bogging down my brain. "What is it, Estrella?" Dante asks, her gaze probing deeper, as if to say, Please don't shut me out. I meet her stare with a slow blink. Dante calling me by my birth name, and the way she rolls her R's, makes me want to hold her voice in my heart forever. To most everyone else, I am Noche, a nickname that has stuck with me since Ma gave it to me when I was little. "I'm going back to school tomorrow," I blurt, my skin popping with goose bumps. Dante leans closer, as if she's having trouble reading my face. "Okay. That's good, yeah?" "I guess. Maybe. . . . I don't know. It'll be so different without you there. It's been three months of homeschooling. Everyone's going to make a big deal of it, I'm sure." "I'm really proud of you, Estrella," she says, though I'm not sure why. I've done absolutely nothing to deserve it. "I'd go with you if I could," she adds, and for a second I perk up at the impossible possibility. "That would be interesting," I say, smiling inside. "It would." Dante giggles, and I'm positive I'll never tire of hearing her laugh like this. I scoot closer, our near touch sending another wave of chills across my frigid body. "Whoa, you feel that?" I ask. She nods, giving the ground her attention. "Umm, yeah. Of course I do." I blink again, willing Dante to look at me. The back of my tongue pricks, as if there's a pebble stuck in my throat. Lying is not her thing. We both fix our attention on the inky horizon. Dante sits up, then hugs her knees. "Don't stress about school. January's a midseason whirlwind. Everyone will have hockey on the brain." My heart stings for her. Dante's got to miss playing and being captain of the girls' team. I about say as much, but I'm compelled to correct her instead. "It's the end of February, not January, sweetie," I say. "Oh, yeah," she says, with a wobbly giggle. "I--­I knew that." My stomach tenses when she rests her chin on her knees. Again, she's not being truthful. Every part of me wants to let it go and pull her into my arms. But I can't do either of these things, so her dishonesty stews inside my chest. I shudder. Superior's waters flatten to a sheet of ebony glass in the distance. The lake won't stay this way for long. I watch the calm like a hawk, waiting for the waves to build their strength from beneath. Dante straightens her legs, then flexes her toes in the running shoes I gave her for her birthday last year. She shoots an imaginary arrow at a spot in the middle of the ice--­ the spot. Yes, we are keeping our enemy close. Whether we like it or not, the lake has become part of us. My head rotates left, then right, because I'm sensing a shift in the weather. As if on cue, the wind picks up. The very ends of my feet vibrate with warmth, which means that soon I will have to go. "Julien will have your back," Dante says, an anxious tinge to her words. She's been here with me enough to know when our time is slipping. "He'll always be there for you, you know?" I do know this, so I tilt my head in agreement, though Julien and I haven't been hanging out much. He's been busy with his own things, being named captain of the boys' varsity hockey team and all. Dante's sigh flows from her lips, absent of the fog that comes with mine. I'm only inches away but suddenly feel apart from her too. "No rink can compete with what the two of you have," she says, drawing me back in. "I'm pretty sure you're locked in as besties. I mean the guy's stuck with you since kindergarten, even though your taste in music sucks and you can't skate to save your life. That says it all in my book." She smiles wide, her sparkling golden eyes stirring my insides--­the reason I'll never stop meeting her here, no matter how many rules we're breaking. I duck as if trying to head-­butt her arm. "Goals for both of us. Because I've stuck with you even though the sappy stuff you listen to fried your reasoning and you can't pull off a chemistry equation to save your li--­" My sentence flatlines and I turn away. "Don't you mean emotional, heartfelt, and longing sappy stuff?" When I turn back, Dante's so close to me I can imagine her rosemary smell. My chest tumbles. She hovers her hand just above my shoulder. "I can't go to school with you on Monday. We know this, right?" I nod, my body tensing. "But I'll be here. As long as you need me." "What if that's forever?" I ask. "Para siempre, entonces." My breath stutters. Three things about Dante. I love her because she speaks Spanish to me, even though she knows I'll have to google most of what she says. I love her because she never makes me feel weird about this, or less than. And her aura. I love her violet-­with-­pink-­around-­the-­edges aura, something I swear was present when she was among the living. A dark sheet drifts across the sky, obscuring the canvas of celestial hydrogen and helium. The distant caw of a raven perks my plumicorns. I spot him just as Dante does. "There." She points as the bird soars over the water. He dips down, making a show of it, then lands on a nearby branch. "Duty calls," she says with a sigh. Duty. She's totally right. I am tethered to an endless task, a responsibility I never asked for. My nights don't solely belong to Dante. They also belong to the rest of the dead. Excerpted from On the Wings of la Noche by Vanessa L. Torres 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.