Reviews

The Things She's Seen by Ambelin Kwaymullina, Ezekiel Kwaymullina

felo's review against another edition

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5.0

Brilliant.

nina_reads_books's review against another edition

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5.0

This is a very unusual YA book but I loved it. I powered through it in a couple of sittings over one day.

Beth Teller is a sixteen year old Indigenous girl who has died in a car accident. Her dad is stricken with grief so Beth has stayed around as a ghost to help him. He is able to see her and speak with her which I thought worked really well as a storytelling device. As a detective he has been sent to investigate a fire which has burnt down a home for wayward children in a small country town. There is a burnt out body and two missing staff.

Together Beth and her dad have to solve the mystery that soon also includes a missing girl case from 20 years ago plus more bodies. They meet a teenage girl called Isobel Catching at the hospital and she has her own story to tell. What is her connection to the fire? What other secrets about this small town does she know?

The story is told in alternating voices – from Beth’s POV and then Isobel’s. Isobel’s chapters are told in verse and her story is strange and dream-like. She describes illusions and strange creatures and it is clear that something terrible has happened to Isobel.

Though this story is about a mystery that needs solving it is also about family, death and the lasting effects of grief. The treatment of Indigenous people in Australia including the forcible removal of children from their families and the indifference faced when Indigenous people go missing were also themes. The authors are an Indigenous sister and brother and the authors note at the end is really interesting as they discuss how Indigenous story telling influenced the way they wrote their story.

Because this is YA there is a fairly light treatment of the themes and some of the more difficult issues raised near the end are not dwelt on which I think makes this a very readable and not too distressing story.

I really enjoyed this book.

anely73's review against another edition

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4.0

4.5

purplepaste's review against another edition

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4.0

Well, I picked this up as a quick upper to read after Nickel Boys. BAD IDEA. Do not do what I did.

theshygardener's review against another edition

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5.0

This short book is technically YA but reads very much like adult fiction. It is a thriller that uncovers the intergenerational trauma of aboriginal characters with a strong focus on ways of healing and justice (namely the way that victims find justice when receiving no support from police). It is poetic and beautiful and one that I will certainly read again.

crystal_e_fall's review against another edition

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4.0

I don't quite know what to rate this - I found the beginning a bit slow and the first chapter written in verse felt a bit clunky, but the lead up towards the end was excellent and it really caught my attention all the way through. I think a quite significant part of that was due to the incredible audiobook narrator, I was blown away by how engaging she made the story feel!

macklmoore's review against another edition

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3.0

Although this book was interesting and enjoyable, I didn’t love the writing style and struggled at times to get into the story. That being said, I liked the dual narration, especially the sections of prose!

(2.5-3 stars)

apatnam's review against another edition

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3.0

Speculative Fiction: I thought this book was a good mystery. I liked how it integrated Aboriginal stories with a thriller. The characters and plot were well developed. The sections in verse were confusing to follow.

claireabellaanthony's review against another edition

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adventurous dark mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix

4.0

This book is very well done. The end particularly has some heavier stuff that's more distinct but it's not graphic. Recommend for YA and up!

ebralz's review against another edition

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3.0

This was well written, but just not my cup of tea. Took me really long time to read it because I just couldn't connect with the story or the characters. However, it was well written and a good murder mystery for a YA book.