Marrow by Tarryn Fisher

In the Bone there is a house. 

In the house there is a girl. 

In the girl there is a darkness. 

Margo is not like other girls. She lives in a derelict neighborhood called the Bone, in a cursed house, with her cursed mother, who hasn’t spoken to her in over two years. She lives her days feeling invisible. It’s not until she develops a friendship with her wheelchair-bound neighbor, Judah Grant, that things begin to change. When neighborhood girl, seven-year-old Neveah Anthony, goes missing, Judah sets out to help Margo uncover what happened to her. 

What Margo finds changes her, and with a new perspective on life, she’s determined to find evil and punish it–targeting rapists and child molesters, one by one. 

But hunting evil is dangerous, and Margo risks losing everything, including her own soul.

Review:

Every word had purpose, to describe and to make you think more in depth about all thoughts, emotions, characters and scenes within the pages. I found myself rereading little details, even those that might not have seemed that significant because really they all are important in creating the bigger picture. I have so many questions that have so many possible answers, I will be thinking about this book for a long time to come, that is the beauty and brilliance of Tarryn Fishers writing.


No comments:

Post a Comment