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The Letting Go

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Everyone Emily has ever loved has been brutally murdered. The killer has never been caught, but Emily knows who's responsible.
She is.
It's the only possible explanation. Emily is the one thing all the victims have in common, which can only mean that someone—or something—is killing them to make her suffer.
Determined never to subject another person to the same horrible fate as her parents, friends, and pets, Emily sequesters herself at a private boarding school, keeping her classmates at a distance with well-timed insults and an unapproachable air. Day after day, she loses herself in the writing of Emily Dickinson—the poet makes a perfect friend, since she's already dead.
Emily's life is lonely, but it's finally peaceful. That is, until two things happen. A corpse appears on the steps of the school. And a new girl insists on getting close to Emily—unknowingly setting herself up to become the killer's next victim.
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    • School Library Journal

      May 1, 2018

      Gr 8 Up-Emily attends a boarding school run by a free-spirited woman who raised four artsy daughters in their coastal California home; she allowed each one to pursue her learning and talent independently and creatively, resulting in all becoming famous and wealthy. Now the students who populate that house devote themselves to artistic endeavors; and while Emily seeks her own voice as a poet, her study is the life and work of Emily Dickinson. Her fascination for the reclusive mid-19th-century poet relates to her own forced seclusion, hiding from a world repelled and fascinated by the bizarre deaths of her family and friends. This violent end for anyone close to her seems a curse that started with her mother when Emily was four. To defend herself, she lobs insults at anyone who dares smile or offer company, refusing affection, until another Emily joins the school. The girl who goes by M irrepressibly breaches the walls Emily has built around herself. A man is found shot in the back of the head on school grounds, giving M a chance to reach out to Emily, who can't understand how she has caused the stranger's death, but fears herself the culprit somehow. This slow trickle of a novel is told in first-person thoughts and information from Emily's notebooks, many entries with quotations from Dickinson and tidbits about the poet's life. VERDICT This intended mystery focuses too little on whodunit, limiting its appeal to only patient, scholarly readers.-Suzanne Gordon, Lanier High School, Sugar Hill, GA

      Copyright 2018 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Kirkus

      May 1, 2018
      Emily Stone doesn't get close to anyone: Those she has loved have ended up dead.Teenage Emily--named for her mother's favorite poet, Emily Dickinson--has found refuge at the Hawthorne Academy for Independent Young Women, where she has made it a point to remain aloof from other students, being rude and condescending whenever anyone speaks to her. It's the only way to keep them safe. Emily immerses herself in her independent study of Dickinson; after all, it's safe to love a dead poet. After a man's body is found on school grounds, Emily goes into a tailspin. She didn't know him. Is his death a coincidence? Is it inevitable that death follows her wherever she goes? When Emily meets another student named Emily, who goes by M, she can't resist this smart-mouthed, charismatic, saint-obsessed artist. Knowing what she knows now, can she let M in and keep her safe? Or is she better off pushing M away? From the start, Emily lets readers know she's an unreliable narrator. The story is told through Emily's undated diary entries, each of which is prefaced with a snippet of related work from Dickinson. As the story progresses and Emily feels like she's losing control, the entries appear out of order, adding to the sense that nothing is OK. Only one student of color is called out; all other characters are white.Wonderfully eerie and disorienting. (author's note) (Fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2019
      Markus's psychological thriller builds in mystery and suspense as Emily, a passionate scholar of Emily Dickinson, struggles to unravel the links between her own history and an unsolved murder that occurred on the grounds of her small, unstructured girls' boarding school. The strong, smart, and emotionally vibrant characters are intriguing, especially for fans of Dickinson's life and poetry.

      (Copyright 2019 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

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