Bound To Stay Bound

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 Man made monsters
 Author: Rogers, Andrea L.

 Publisher:  Levine Querido (2022)

 Dewey: 808
 Classification: Story Collection
 Physical Description: 315 p., ill., 24 cm

 BTSB No: 762076 ISBN: 9781646141791
 Ages: 12-18 Grades: 7-12

 Subjects:
 Cherokee Indians -- Fiction
 Monsters -- Fiction
 Horror fiction
 Short stories
 Cherokee Indians -- Fiction
 Native Americans -- North America -- Fiction

Price: $23.98

Summary:
Haunting illustrations are woven throughout these horror stories that follow one extended Cherokee family across the centuries and well into the future as they encounter predators of all kinds in each time period.

 Illustrator: Edwards, Jeff
Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: UG
   Reading Level: 5.40
   Points: 12.0   Quiz: 521838

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (+) (07/01/22)
   School Library Journal (+) (00/10/22)
   Booklist (+) (03/15/23)
 The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (+) (00/10/22)
 The Hornbook (+) (00/11/22)

Full Text Reviews:

Booklist - 08/01/2022 *Starred Review* At the start of Rogers’ startling new collection is an epigraph from an academic essay titled “Reading History: Cherokee History Through a Cherokee Lens” that examines what the Cherokee language and perspective reveal about past and intergenerational trauma and its impact on present-day health and social concerns.At once precisely contained and wildly expansive, this is a collection that doesn’t push boundaries so much as claw at them and then pull back. A pair of family trees, in stark white typeface against black paper, set the scope for the stories that follow. Each brief tale—some previously published elsewhere, many original—­is centered around a different member of this extended family. The first, Ama Wilson, travels a lonely Texas road with her mother and siblings in 1839, only to run afoul of monsters. The last, Charlotte Henry, escapes a horde of zombies and a violent father in 2039.In the two centuries between, the stories unfold chronologically. The Wilsons, a Cherokee family in the American South, are at the the heart of each. The stories vary in length and in tone—some venture into the psyche of a particular character, some weave stories that often have the feel of a tall tale or family legend, some are mere snapshots, moments that links other stories, other family members, together. Characters slip in and out of each other’s histories, arriving to speak, vanishing again.On its face, this is about what haunts: the stories examine the horrors of life and the horrors beyond it. In 1945, Rabbit Wilson sees a strange specter running with his friends as he waits for his brother to return from the war and absentmindedly dreads his own journey to boarding school. In 1968, Gina Wilson begins a sweet but doomed romance with the goat boy she dubs Matt, whose appearance terrifies her neighbors. In 1979, Audrey and her sister shelter from a snowstorm in their dead cousin’s car, only to meet a ghost. In 2019, Laura Wilson’s boyfriend hits her, so her brother builds her a replacement boy online. Walela King Preston’s father dies in an accident in 2029, the same time an alien crash-lands in her pool, and it takes all the broken pieces left of her family to help.Ama, the family and the collection’s matriarch, ends her own story having died at 16 at the teeth of a blood-sucking creature (vampiric, though that word is not used in her story). When she rises again, she follows a road toward death or family, declaring, “I became merciless, too.” And yet, deathless, she is the character who turns up the most in the subsequent stories, not to terrorize but to offer a guiding hand or a reassuring presence, to help her family through the horrors that their present and collective pasts have brought. And while this is undoubtedly a horror collection, it finds its roots and its balance in that warm core of family.If, in fantasy, magic so often has consequences, in horror, the magic is the consequence: monsters are begotten in violence, in trauma, in sorrow. For the Wilsons and their relatives, those consequences reach through generations. Much of the time, the monsters in these pages don’t show their faces, and they aren’t given names. They are also, far more often than not, less monstrous than the harshest human realities that Rogers’ created family stares directly in the face. And they are less powerful than the quiet ways in which a family and a community can endure.Both Rogers and illustrator Edwards, whose art precedes each story, incorporate Cherokee words into their work, threading the language into the bones of the collection. The final product will leave readers—adults as well as teens—unsettled, feeling like they have caught a glimpse into a larger world, and like there is a wider one still, just out of sight. - Copyright 2022 Booklist.

School Library Journal - 10/01/2022 Gr 8 Up—Chilling stories tell about generations of a Cherokee family's encounters with the supernatural and violence. Beginning on the Trail of Tears, when Ama is turned into the Undead, and continuing through 2039, the stories of Ama's various family members and descendants are told. Each chapter can be read as a standalone short story; the entries are tied together by characters from one story appearing in later ones. Ama is featured in many of the chapters, appearing to help and guide her current family members through various trials and tribulations. The stories from the 1800s are odes to European horror. In the 1900s, ghosts, werewolves, and revenge are the main topics, and during the 2000s, most of the characters are dealing with violence—dating, gun, and domestic. Traumatic events are primarily alluded to, then described in detail. Most chapters end without a clear understanding of what happened to the various characters. The narrative incorporates Cherokee history, words, and customs. One section focuses on Deer Woman, a Cherokee myth, who avenges women and children. The themes throughout are family love and tribal ties. Each chapter begins with the name of a family member, date of the event, and a white illustration on a black background. Family trees are provided at the beginning, and a glossary of Cherokee words written in English and in Cherokee syllabary are provided at the end. VERDICT Full of familiar tropes and new ideas, these stories are the right balance of suspense without too much horror. A strong first purchase.—Tamara Saarinen - Copyright 2022 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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