This is a fairy tale, a myth, and a quest fantasy, set in an Indian
village, all rolled into one. Tara and her younger brother's mother
leaves them suddenly one night with only a hushed whisper that one
day she will return. A year later her father is nothing but a
walking shell who lets their stereotypical evil stepmother treat
them like servants. Tara's grandfather also disappeared the same
night as her mother and he was the villages' healer; now a new
healer has arrived and some think he is evil but the men in town
either turn to his side or disappear. Then one night Tara overhears
a plan that involves killing herself and her brother and she
decides she must go find her mother and face the forest and the
Vetalas (which a google search compares to vampires but the
descriptions both on the net and in the book remind me more of
zombies) which roam within. Thus begins a journey and a quest
filled with Hindu mythology to save Tara's family and villagers.
This was a delightfully wonderful book. With the rather mystical
yet staid cover I wasn't sure what to suspect with its pages. The
book begins very over the top in fairy tale fashion but not in a
satire fashion, just in an obvious tone letting one know that in
fairy tales bad thing can happen and probably will happen. The book
then turns darker and there are some quite dark images pictured
throughout the book, hence I would not recommend for young
children. The secondary characters are never fully realized and
left to play their parts in the plot by Tara is a wonderful,
resourceful, intelligent, strong female character with a deep
character and realistically flawed. The plot itself is steeped in
Hindu mythology and this is where the whole feel and essence of the
book comes from. It's not a particularly common topic in YA fantasy
and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Certainly well-written and a
compelling read. My one main flaw with the book is that it is too
short. At times it feels rushed; there are many parts that could
have been extended and an extra hundred or so pages could have
filled out the quest section and the final ending which seemed to
hurry up and finish as time was running out. This can all be
excused as first novel symptoms, but then, the book ends with an
absolutely brilliant last sentence letting one know there is a
sequel in the works and as I look on Amazon The Silver Anklet will
be out in November ('09). Well worth a read if you are looking for
a YA fantasy a little different than the norm.