Reviews for The beckoning shadow

Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Blair's debut novel gives an interesting twist to the sf trope of superpowered individuals being outcasts or used by the government. While both emerge here, they spawn an fight scene in which Oddities wield their powers against each other, with the victor promised a large cash prize and an unraveling an undoing of a past event in the individual's life. Vesper has been grappling with her identity as a harbinger, one who can draw people's fears into reality, and she runs away from home in order to keep her family safe from her unpredictable power. When she is taken in by a group of Oddities training for the fighting tournament, Vesper can't resist the chance to save her family from a hurtful fate at her hands. She dedicates herself to mastering her power and learning fighting techniques with Sam, her backer and trainer. Blair provides plenty of action, twists, and duplicity as the story unfolds, incorporating a complicated romance and even discussion of religion along the way. Hand to fans of Emily Lloyd-Jones' Illusive (2014).--Julia Smith Copyright 2019 Booklist


Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

A girl with magical powers enters a brutal tournament, trying to win a chance to rewrite her past.As a child, Vesper loved stories about the Oddities and their magic. Then she became one. She's a Harbinger, capable of manifesting people's fears. Ever since a horrifying incident borne of her lack of control, Vesper's been a runaway loner. After landing in San Francisco, she crosses paths with fellow Oddities and learns about a high-stakes cage-fighting tournament; the winning Oddity gets $1 million and one unraveling (undoing something that has happened, altering the past). She doesn't know how to fight and is scared of her own dangerous powers but badly wants to undo her damaging past. Vesper teams up with Sam, a nonmagical Baseline human, who oversees her rigorous training at an MMA gym. The deal is that she gets the cash prize, and he gets the unraveling to correct where things went wrong in his last relationship two years prior. Even while planning to betray him and claim the unraveling, Vesper begins to fall for Sam. All storylinesthe tournament, what happened with Sam's ex, why the rules of magic are changingtie together through flawless pacing and well-balanced action, leading to revelations that foster character growth. While Vesper and Sam are assumed white, secondary characters have varying skin tones.An extraordinary debut packed with richly drawn characters in a sure-to-entertain storyline. (Fantasy. 14-adult) Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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Former cheerleader Vesper, 17, remembers her previous life: before she learned that she was an Oddity, before the fire that she inadvertently set took her home and nearly destroyed her family in Los Altos, and before she learned exactly what her powers as a Harbinger-discerning and conjuring a person's worst fear-could do. On the run, she ends up in San Francisco overnight and falls in with a group of teens, many also Oddities with powers that manifested the same time as her own. This acquaintanceship leads her to an underground gladiatorial tournament and a chance at undoing the past and returning to her former life. The more time she spends with her new friends, including Sam, the Baseline (nonmagical) boy she partners with for the tournament but plans to betray, the more she realizes that something darker is afoot. There's a shady past to the group who used to police Oddities but have since disappeared-and their secrets threaten to overwhelm the present. Interweaving excellent worldbuilding with the uncertainties of discipline, friendship, and taking ownership of one's decisions, Blair's debut will entrance and delight in equal measure. Ages 14-up. Agent: Brianne Johnson, Writers House. (July) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


School Library Journal
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Gr 9 Up—Vesper is on the run, sleeping beneath overpasses and in abandoned churches. Two years ago, she realized the thing her parents should have feared was her…right before she destroyed them and ran. She steps off the bus in another new place and walks right into the world she's been running from: a blue Queen of Poisons flower dried and tacked to a door. This is a death sentence from the Wardens who make sure that Oddities are dealt with and the world is safe for real people. A cup of coffee seems like a good idea but ends up as another chance for her magic to take control and ruin her world again—forever. Innocent people are hurt, and the police draw their guns. The youth who save Vesper from her folly show her a whole new world of danger and hope and an opportunity to change and save everything. She has to try, even if it means her death. Poetry fans will appreciate quotations from William Ernest Henley's poem "Invictus" throughout the novel, and the message it sends. This story of magic, hope, death, friendship, and family will engage teen readers. VERDICT Offering a taste of the mystical, a great voice and dialogue, and well-written questions that address teen angst, the book reads like Brandon Sanderson's Steelheart meets Barry Lyga's The Astonishing Adventures of Fanboy and Goth Girl. A solid choice for YA libraries.—Cathleen Ash, Manor High School Library, TX

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