Elatsoe
Books | Young Adult Fiction / Diversity & Multicultural
3.8
(332)
Darcie Little Badger
Locus Award Winner—Best First NovelA National Indie BestsellerNebula Award FinalistLodestar Award FinalistIgnyte Award FinalistTIME's Best 100 Fantasy Books of All TimeNPR Best of the YearBooklist's Top 10 First Novels for YouthA BookPage Best of the YearChicago Public Library "Best of the Best"PNBA BestsellerPublishers Weekly Best of the YearBuzzfeed's Best YA SFF of the YearShelf-Awareness Best of the YearAICL Best YA of the YearNECBA Windows & Mirrors Selection<br>NEIBA Award FinalistTor Best of the YearKirkus Best YA of the YearPublishers Weekly Flying StartAmerican Indian Youth Literature Award Finalist"Groundbreaking."—TIME"Deeply enjoyable from start to finish."—NPR"Utterly magical."—SyFyWire"Atmospheric and lyrical...a gorgeous work of art."—BuzzFeed"One of the best YA debuts of 2020. Read it."—Marieke Nijkamp★ "A fresh voice and perspective."—Booklist, starred review★ "A unique and powerful Native American voice."—BookPage, starred review★ "A brilliant, engaging debut."—Kirkus Reviews, starred review★ "A fast-paced murder mystery."—Publishers Weekly, starred review★ "A Lipan Apache Sookie Stackhouse for the teen set."—Shelf-Awareness, starred reviewA Texas teen comes face-to-face with a cousin's ghost and vows to unmask the murderer.Elatsoe—Ellie for short—lives in an alternate contemporary America shaped by the ancestral magics and knowledge of its Indigenous and immigrant groups. She can raise the spirits of dead animals—most importantly, her ghost dog Kirby. When her beloved cousin dies, all signs point to a car crash, but his ghost tells her otherwise: He was murdered.Who killed him and how did he die? With the help of her family, her best friend Jay, and the memory great, great, great, great, great, great grandmother, Elatsoe, must track down the killer and unravel the mystery of this creepy town and it's dark past. But will the nefarious townsfolk and a mysterious Doctor stop her before she gets started?A breathtaking debut novel featuring an asexual, Apache teen protagonist, Elatsoe combines mystery, horror, noir, ancestral knowledge, haunting illustrations, fantasy elements, and is one of the most-talked about debuts of the year.
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Author
Darcie Little Badger
Pages
368
Publisher
Chronicle Books
Published Date
2020-08-25
ISBN
1646140060 9781646140060
Community ReviewsSee all
"3.5 stars<br/><br/>I have no idea what it is. I don’t know if it is the characters or the fact that i’m not that much of a mystery reader but i really liked this story but i didn’t fall in love with it. <br/><br/>The book has a lot of cool aspects. Being based on our world but with little hits of magic. The main character can bring creatures back to life. She brought back her dog which is her companion throughout the book.<br/><br/>The main character is asexual. She never struggles with her identity. There is no romance. The magic being based on tribe and culture is cool. The mystery was fun.<br/><br/>I should love this book more than i do. There is nothing wrong with the book. I am just not super attached to the book. The ending was a bit much but it is a good book."
"Sigh. This was one of those books that just kicks you in the ******* teeth because you really want to like it, but it's impossible too. <br/><br/>This is one of those books where the premise is intriguing, it has potential, but it just flops so hard that it makes me cringe. This book is about a girl, who I can't even remember the name of any more. Okay, I just looked it up and her name is Ellie. <br/><br/>(actually, her name is Elatsoe and I just ******* realized that from reading the summary. I thought her name was like Eleanor or something)<br/><br/>The setting of this book was what really roped me in when I first read the summary. It takes place in America just like the modern-day U.S, but magic is a well-known thing. In fact, the main character can raise ghosts from the dead. <br/><br/>And she has a ghost dog. <br/><br/>A F U C K I N G G H O S T D O G<br/><br/>Can you see why I was so disappointed when I hated this?<br/><br/>The story starts with the main character getting an eerie feeling. So she races to the movie theater to make sure her parents are all right. They're alright, but her cousin's dead. And it was a car accident, or so they thought. <br/><br/>Ellie's cousin comes to her in a dream and is like 'yeah, no, this dude named Abe killed me.' <br/><br/>That's literally all I can tell you because everything else was a blur. <br/><br/>My first problem with this book was the writing. The dialogue was jarring. Almost cartoonish. I feel like if I turned on an episode of Spongebob right now, I would hear something Ellie would say come out of Spongebob's mouth. The writing itself was bland it felt like I was reading the script for a movie more than an actual book. <br/><br/>Secondly, this book feels like middle grade, even though it's considered YA. Now, a book being middle-grade does not make it bad. Just because something is intended for a younger audience doesn't automatically mean that older people won't like it. A prime example of this is the Percy Jackson series. I think everybody loves that and I have never seen a person dislike it. But this is like... middle-grade but the author thought the targeted audience was really stupid. <br/><br/>The characters in this book were just... not real. There is no way in hell Ellie is 17, and every time it was stated that she was 17, it felt like I was getting backhanded out of an already shallow experience. It was like the author wrote the entire series and either realized this book would gain more attraction if it was YA and changed her age from 10 to 17 at the last minute, or just realized that this character in no way acted like a teenager and sprinkled at least one reference to her age per chapter. <br/><br/>Ellie's dad really ****** me off, too. Her father knows that Abe killed their cousin, but still lets his daughter waltz up to him and start a casual conversation with him. But accidentally falling into a river is crossing the line.<br/><br/>All the characters resemble cardboard cutouts. Seriously, you know those big ass, creepy cardboard cutouts you can get of celebrities? That's how I imagined every single character. And everytime they talked, an animated mouth popped up. <br/><br/>The portrayal of grief in this just... wasn't real? Ellie spends no time mourning over her cousin. Neither does really anybody else but the wife of said dead cousin. (I wasn't joking when I said I can't remember names). <br/><br/>Now, you're probably like: Al, how about the ending? <br/><br/>And now, I'm going to tell you, I have no ******* clue because I DNF'd it at like 160 pages. Which is saying something because I always try to get at least two hundred pages into a book before I throw it in the trash bin (or in this case, return it to the library)<br/><br/>Overall, I would not recommend unless you want to be incredibly ****** off."
A W
Allykay Willims
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