http://www.goodreads.com/ book/show/16131077-the- shining-girls |
Harper Curtis squats in a house, the owner dead and rotting
in the hallway. In his pocket he finds a key. When he uses the key in the front
door, he is taken to whatever time he imagines. He returns later to bludgeon
the owner, thus coming full circle in the timeline. Harper travels through time
looking for his “shining girls”, girls that emit an aura-like light that he
alone can see. He finds them as children, making contact with them when he
does, promising to return again, sometime in the future. When he finds them as
adults, he brutally slays them, leaving with them a souvenir from a previous
kill. The book opens with Harper gifting Kirby a small, plastic horse, years
before the date left behind by the mould on the bottom off the horse’s foot. He
returns later to murder Kirby, but unbeknownst to Harper, she survives and
devotes most of her adult life to bringing Harper to justice. Harper’s hubris
in leaving behind these anachronistic souvenirs is what eventually helps Kirby
orchestrate his undoing.
The Shining Girls
by Lauren Beukes is part Dexter’s evil twin, part grown-up Nancy Drew in the
perfect combination. It’s been a while since I’ve read a page-turner, and The Shining Girls is a mesmerizing one
at that. Beukes’ prose is literary and compelling. Her tone is gritty and dark,
whether from Harper, the murderer’s, Kirby, the victim’s, or Dan, the reporter’s
points of view. Whether depression, disco, or near-twenty-first century, Buekes’
story makes the era come to life. I love time travel as a plot device, but it
must be done right. I need to know about the technology that transports the
characters from one time to the next. Beukes chooses to make the device a
psychic key, of sorts. Beyond the question of how the original owner obtains it
(which is told in the final chapter), the reader is too caught up in the lives
of the characters to question it’s true origin (i.e., from where or whom it
originated in all time and how it got its power), which is a credit to the
author, as I thought this would hang me up and sour me on the novel altogether;
it didn’t.
Like The Time Traveler’s
Wife, The Shining Girls is one of
those novels I can see myself returning to in the future (no pun intended) to
read and re-read before I am able to grasp all of the subtle nuances of the
manuscript. And I will do this with gusto.
About the Author
Elise Abram, English teacher and former archaeologist, has been writing for as long as she can remember, but it wasn’t until she was asked to teach Writer’s Craft in 2001 that she began to write seriously. Her first novel, THE GUARDIAN was partially published as a Twitter novel a few summers back (and may be accessed at @RKLOGYprof). Nearly ten years after its inception Abram decided it was time to stop shopping around with traditional publication houses and publish PHASE SHIFT on her own.
Download PHASE SHIFT for the price of a tweet. Visit http://www.eliseabram.com, click on the button, tweet or Facebook about my novel and download it for FREE!
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