Black Feathers
A Novel
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- $11.99
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- $11.99
Publisher Description
Sixteen-year-old runaway Cassie Weathers is utterly alone, living on the streets as winter sets in. Then she meets Skylark, a young girl who introduces her to a community of street-dwellers and runaways. As Cassie settles in to the community, the city is rocked by the news that a number of young prostitutes have been murdered.
Cassie grows closer to Skylark, but the night terrors and sleep paralysis Cassie suffered as a child begin to return, and the mystery as to why she ran away from home deepens. While it seems she ran to escape abuse, the actual reason might be more terrifying: helpless to resist her dreams, did she kill her father and leave home to protect her mother and sister?
In the camp, Cassie's dreams take another turn: she dreams of killing one of the members of the community, a woman whose body is found nearby the following morning after an apparent suicide. When Cassie dreams of killing Skylark, she tries to run again only to find herself drawn back into the new home she has found. When Skylark disappears, Cassie is left alone, spiralling into complex dreamworlds where her past blurs with her present and nothing can be trusted.
Inspired by authors such as Stephen King, Charles de Lint and Neil Gaiman, Black Feathers is a novel that straddles genres, incorporating elements of literary fiction, urban fantasy and horror. It’s a coming of age story, a love story and a mythic thriller.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Victoria, the sleepy provincial capital of British Columbia, gets a makeover as a gritty city of dark, threatening mean streets in Wiersema's (Bedtime Story) bulky page-turner. In the unusually frigid winter of 1997, na ve teenage runaway Cassie Weathers faces danger and her own fears. Trying to escape a long history of night terrors, she winds up begging for coins in a locale where women young prostitutes and vagrants are being tortured and butchered by one or more serial killers. Among inquisitive police, a friendly-seeming stranger, a bullying homeless youth, a charismatic activist, a fellow runaway, and a kindhearted waitress, Cassie's not sure who can be trusted. Worse, she's assailed by frequent violent dreams that point at her culpability in current and past crimes. The author displays an assured sense of pacing and an instinctive understanding of sleight-of-hand whodunit mechanics, but verbose, philosophizing villains straight from central casting lend a few sections overwrought, melodramatic, and campy qualities that undermine the nail-biting tone Wiersema otherwise sustains. In addition, the resolution stands at distinct odds with the somber worldview he devotes such energy to establish.