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Bridgekeeper - by L S Moore (Paperback)
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About this item
Highlights
- On a night when the veil between the living and the dead is as thin as a soap bubble, Will McCurty discovers a chilling family legacy.
- 352 Pages
- Young Adult Fiction, Ghost Stories
Description
About the Book
On a night when the veil between the living and the dead is as thin as a soap bubble, Will McCurty discovers a chilling family legacy.
Each generation's firstborn becomes a medium, a Bridge between the living world and the In Between. It shouldn't affect Will, but his older brother needs a Keeper, someone who can make sure the anguished spirits move on. Becoming a Keeper means Will must harbor secrets, lie to friends, and break his mother's heart.
It's that or abandon his brother to the desperate dead.
Book Synopsis
On a night when the veil between the living and the dead is as thin as a soap bubble, Will McCurty discovers a chilling family legacy.
Each generation's firstborn becomes a medium, a Bridge between the living world and the In Between. It shouldn't affect Will, but his older brother needs a Keeper, someone who can make sure the anguished spirits move on. Becoming a Keeper means Will must harbor secrets, lie to friends, and break his mother's heart.
It's that or abandon his brother to the desperate dead.
Review Quotes
In Moore's YA debut, two brothers must come to terms with their inherited psychic powers and track down a killer before
he can strike again.
Sixteen-year-old Hapkido black belt Will McCurty and his 20-year-old college student brother, Seth, live with their mother
40 miles outside Kansas City, Missouri. Eight years after their father, a police officer, was killed in the line of duty, their
estranged grandmother appears and explains to Will that Seth, like their dad, is a "Bridge"--a human connection between
the living and the dead. She goes on to say that Seth must bond with a "Keeper"--someone to protect him and remember
what the dead say when they speak through him. It's only after Will reluctantly agrees that he realizes that their grandma
has herself passed on, and is manifesting due to Seth's power. The brothers' new abilities take some getting used to. One
desperate spirit possesses Seth completely, nearly killing Will when he mistakes him for his own murderer. Will,
meanwhile, has developed an aura that brings him to the attention of Maureen "Reen" Gardener, his Wicca-practicing
classmate and crush; however, the new status quo threatens to come between him and his best friend, Nico. As family
friend Uncle Marcus mentors the siblings, they struggle to keep angry spirits at bay, uncover the truth behind a classmate's
disappearance, and bring a killer to justice. Moore relates the story with an assured blend of narrative prose, introspection,
and teen-appropriate dialogue. From the outset, Will (the narrator) and Seth demonstrate a strong and endearing fraternal
relationship that evokes the Hardy Boys, and their introduction to the supernatural world carries distinct Scooby-Doo,
Where Are You? vibes, albeit with a darker edge. Supporting characters Reen, Nico, and Uncle Marcus add a grounding
touch by exhibiting personality beyond mere plot function. The story's antagonists are less nuanced, but this doesn't
detract from the rising sense of peril. Moore doesn't invest much time in establishing setting, but the generic school
environment and recurrent graveyards prove sufficient.
A fast-moving paranormal adventure for teens with heavy themes and an upbeat delivery.
-Kirkus Reviews