A multilayered, character-driven, and richly rewarding installment to the paranormal historical fiction series.—
Nina Sachs, Walker Memorial Library, Westbrook, MESeventeen-year-old flapper Evie O’Neill (The Diviners, rev. 11/12) and friends confront another supernatural threat. As before, Bray follows multiple characters, many of them also paranormally gifted; while Evie (now a radio star known as the “Sweetheart Seer”) is still a focal point, here dream walkers Henry DuBois and Ling Chan also come to the fore. Several plot threads intertwine when Ling and Henry begin dream-walking together (Henry hopes to communicate with Louis, the love he left behind in New Orleans; Ling meets another dream walker, a Chinese girl named Wai-Mae) and a frightening “sleeping sickness” descends on New York City, sending people into comas, then death. As the sleeping sickness spreads, Henry and Ling start to notice disturbing things about the dream world…and about Wai-Mae. Bray’s vividly detailed descriptions, which take readers from glittering high-society parties to claustrophobic tunnels filled with ghastly creatures, give the novel a sweeping, cinematic quality. Sweet relationships (romantic, platonic, and familial) and snarky banter filled with period slang balance and accentuate the suspenseful horror. Through it all, new questions arise as mysteries from the previous novel deepen. What is the connection between the Diviners and the government’s ominous Project Buffalo? Who is the man in the stovepipe hat lurking at the edges of all this supernatural violence? Despite its considerable length, fans will barrel through this second installment and emerge impatient for the next. katie bircher
Seventeen-year-old flapper Evie (The Diviners) and friends confront another supernatural threat. As before, Bray follows multiple characters, many also paranormally gifted. Several plot threads intertwine when Ling and Henry begin dream-walking together and a frightening "sleeping sickness" descends on NYC. Bray's vividly detailed descriptions, taking readers from glittering high-society parties to claustrophobic tunnels filled with ghastly creatures, give the novel a cinematic quality.