Ivy Rowan sees ghosts. The women in her family all have this gift, or curse. Whenever they glimpse a “harbinger spirit,” they know someone close to them will die soon.
The heavy sense of dread that hangs over Cat Winters’ work of gothic suspense, her first novel for adults, derives as much from the historical milieu as from this unnatural ability.
Set in fictional Buchanan, Illinois, population 12,500 (although the infrastructure and sprawling layout appear to resemble a larger city like Peoria rather than the small-town setting where I live), The Uninvited hits to the heart of why the year 1918 was such a terrifying time. The threats are all too human.
Ivy has barely recovered from a nasty bout of flu when she learns her father and younger brother have gone out and killed a German man who co-owned a local furniture store – in a horribly misguided act of revenge, since Ivy’s older brother Billy had recently died while fighting overseas. Feeling intense guilt over the deadly results of their “superpatriotic” sentiments, Ivy leaves her family’s white farm house and trudges past the city limits, with its sign warning visitors about the dreaded influenza.
When she seeks out the victim’s surviving brother, Daniel Schendler, in an effort to somehow make amends, she stumbles into an unexpected mutual attraction. Ivy is also drawn toward the syncopated rhythms emanating from the jazz club that’s sprung up at the Masonic Lodge downtown. Interestingly, the scene there is one of the few places in the city that recognizes people as equals, regardless of color or ethnicity.
The novel is drenched in atmosphere, both the terrible paranoia that caused Americans to turn on so-called enemy aliens during wartime – a shameful practice that continues to occur – and the heady release found in music. For fans of The Thirteenth Tale and other novels of that ilk, The Uninvited has more than one daring twist. (I felt proud at predicting one of them, but another blindsided me.) And either paradoxically or fittingly, in this story saturated by death, it also evokes the intoxicating joy that comes with being young, vibrant, and free. I recommend it as a shivery read this summer.
The Uninvited will be published by William Morrow in trade paperback in August (368pp, $14.99). Thanks to the publisher for approving my access via Edelweiss.
Sounds eerily and fun! Great review!
ReplyDeleteI like novels that turn out differently than I expected - and it's definitely eerie.
DeleteSounds wonderful. Pity we have to wait till August!
ReplyDeleteAugust will be here before we know it! I put this one up a bit early to stir up interest and because I'd read it on my Kindle while I was away earlier in June.
DeleteJust what I needed....another one for my TBR shelves!
ReplyDeleteYou know you want it...
DeleteIt does sound nice, but how do ghosts enter the story?
ReplyDeleteA good question - but I didn't want to say too much about that aspect because of possible spoilers. There's an appearance by Ivy's late grandmother in the beginning, but most of the other supernatural elements take place later in the story.
DeleteGreat review! This sounds fantastic. I love a great eerie, historical. I enjoyed the author's previous work, In the Shadow of Blackbirds, so was stoked to see she has another coming out. Thanks for reminding me it comes out so soon. :)
ReplyDeleteI haven't yet read her YA novels and really ought to - thanks for reminding me of her earlier book. I've read she has another adult historical coming out next year, too.
DeleteSo - when do ghost/eerie stories merge into actual horror? Genre blend observation here. I've noticed more "magical" or "supernatural" elements lately - some are fun/charming; others not so much . . .
ReplyDeleteSarah OL
A good question. The novel has some elements of horror fiction (the dreadful atmosphere), but it's not the gruesome sort or the type that would scare you out of your wits when you're reading it. I'd call it historical paranormal suspense, if I had to pigeonhole it.
DeleteI know that after WWI there was a big spiritualist/seance movement because people were trying to make sense of all of the death and contact their dead loved ones for resolution. Not trying to be morbid here but I wonder if something like this is happening now. "Heaven is for real" and all that . . . . what is the purpose of life . . . .
DeleteI have definitely seen an uptick in ghost stories.
Sarah OL
I love ghost stories.
DeleteThere are many novels about the spiritualist movement set in the post-Civil War period, too, but not as many about ghosts during that era.