Small angels : a novel / Lauren Owen.
Record details
- ISBN: 9780593242209
- ISBN: 0593242203
- Physical Description: x, 386 pages ; 25 cm
- Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: New York : Random House, [2022]
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | Dysfunctional families > Fiction. Sisters > Fiction. Villages > Fiction. Secrecy > Fiction. Weddings > Fiction. First loves > Fiction. Rural lesbians > Fiction. Ghost stories. |
Genre: | Horror fiction. Paranormal fiction. Lesbian fiction. Ghost stories. Gothic fiction. Novels. |
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Ray County Library | F OWE (Text) | 2901856704 | Adult Fiction | Available | - |
Publishers Weekly Review
Small Angels : A Novel
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
With a flair for dramatic atmospherics, Owen (The Quick) offers a creepy, richly detailed, but slow-moving tale of the paranormal encroaching on a contemporary small town. Chloe and Sam are getting married in Sam's hometown, a tiny British village home to the even tinier Small Angels chapel and the eerie Mockbeggar woods. Kate, Sam's sister, is loath to return for the wedding to the site of the worst tragedies of her past. Local legends abound about both the woods and the strange Gonnes family, who live on a farm at the treeline. Kate, who befriended the four Gonnes daughters as a teen--and fell in love with Lucia, the youngest and most otherworldly--knows the legends to be all too true. As the wedding draws closer and the darkness from the woods seeps into everyone's souls, Kate must appease the spirits in the woods and make peace with her past. Kate's role in this world feels murky for too long before her purpose snaps into place, making for a slow start, and though each of the individual threads is well crafted, Owen doesn't manage to braid them all together. Still, the characters engage and provoke readers in the best of ways. Fans of small-town horror should check this out. Agent: David Forrer, InkWell Management. (Aug.)
Library Journal Review
Small Angels : A Novel
Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
In Dean's big, intriguingly premised debut, Devon is part of a venerable clan belonging to The Book Eaters--instead of food, they munch thrillers, romance, and, when they misbehave, dusty dictionaries--and she's terrified to learn that her son is born hungering not for paper, printing, and binding but human minds (150,000-copy first printing). In The Women Could Fly, a dystopian work from Rumpus features editor Giddings, the mother of a young Black woman named Josephine is long vanished--was she a witch? Was she murdered?--and if Josephine doesn't marry soon, she will be forced to enroll in a registry that will effectively blot out her freedom (75,000-copy first printing). In Harris's The Serpent in Heaven, a sequel to The Russian Cage, Felicia is set upon by her estranged family of Mexican wizards and discovers that she is the most powerful witch of her generation (75,000-copy first printing). In Don't Fear the Reaper, Jones's follow-up to the LJ best-booked My Heart Is a Chainsaw, an exonerated Jade Daniels returns home from prison just as convicted serial killer Dark Mill South arrives to avenge 38 Dakota men hanged in 1862 (100,000-copy first printing). In this latest from the multi-award-nominated Kuang, a Chinese boy orphaned in 1828 Canton (now Guangzhou) is brought to London and eventually enters Oxford's Royal Institute of Translation--called Babel--which doubles as a center for magic and compels him to work in support of Britain's imperial ambitions in China (125,000-copy first printing). Modesitt continues his newly launched "Grand Illusion" series with Steffan Dekkard joining the Council of Sixty-Six as Councilor--the first to be an Isolate, which makes him impervious to emotional manipulation but could lead to his assassination (100,000-copy first printing). Author of the Slate best-booked Quick, Owens has Kate planning to hold her wedding at a church called Small Angels in the town where she once found shelter with the Gonne sisters, little realizing that they've been tasked with keeping a marauding ghost from invading the village--and they're falling down on the job. Winner of a BCALA Self-Publishing EBook Award for Song of Blood and Stone, one ofTime's 100 Best Fantasy Books of All Time, Penelope returns with The Monsters We Defy, whose heroine pays off a debt to the Empress ruling the spirit world by agreeing to steal a wealthy woman's ring in 1925 Washington, DC (25,000-copy first printing). From Valdes, author of the LJ best-booked Chilling Effects, Fault Tolerance brings back Capt. Eva Innocente and the raucous crew of La Sirena Negra to counter an anonymous threat that could lead to the death of billions (50,000-copy first printing). Dragon/Nebula finalist Virdi launches a new series with The First Binding, featuring an Immortal disguised as a storyteller--and he's here to relate how he unleashed the First Evil on the world (175,000-copy first printing). The MMU Novella Award-winning West goes full length with Face, set in a genetically engineered society where the perfect profile buys fame, wealth, and power but not happiness for Schuyler and Madeleine Burroughs (60,000-copy first printing).
Kirkus Review
Small Angels : A Novel
Kirkus Reviews
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
The woods are lovely, dark, and deepâ¦and haunted? Chloe's plans for a picture-perfect destination wedding in the small English town where her husband-to-be, Sam, grew up start to go astray when, during their combination stag and hen party--Hag Night--at a village tavern, she learns some disquieting local lore about the quaint church she's booked for the nuptials. The looming presence of the nearby Mockbeggar Woods makes itself more and more evident as the wedding draws near, and soon Chloe herself is drawn into a centuries-old struggle to appease a menacing force which occupies those woods. The battle to manage this supernatural situation has been shouldered by the reclusive Gonne family, including four spirited girls, who for generations have run Blanch Farm at the edge of the woods. The Gonnes have endured inexplicable losses despite the rites and rituals they have developed to protect themselves (and their neighbors) from an angry specter that seems to be growing more demanding as the wedding approaches. Owen weaves together stories told by many voices--past and present--in her updated gothic ghost story, creating a portrait of the damage done by ancient injuries and the toxic legacy created by family secrets. The strong bonds between the Gonne sisters are tested by misunderstandings, and a shy romance between one of the sisters and a village girl has unforeseen repercussions years later. While including elements of gothic literature (young women in trouble! haunted places! an unhappy ghost!), Owen updates the genre slyly with references to Chloe's awareness that she's like the girl in a ghost story she's envisioning inside her head and the encouraging, therapeutic advice dispensed by a well-meaning member of the spirit world who aids in the fight against the disgruntled ghost in the woods. Owen tells an old story in a satisfying new way. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.