Skip to main content

The Healing Spell


The Healing Spell is a middlegrade contemporary novel by Kimberley Griffiths Little.

Eleven-year-old Livie and her mother have never gotten along well. She's not girly like her sisters and would rather go frogging out in the bayou with her daddy than shopping with her Mamma. They've had many an argument and seem to never see eye-to-eye. But then her Mamma is in a coma, unable to wake up - and maybe she never will. And suddenly Livie is keeping a very big secret about what happened. She knows she is responsible for it, but she can't tell anyone - she can't see her daddy's eyes hate her.

But everybody wants her to help out with Mamma, and Livie can't even bring herself to touch her. What if she hurts her again? So she's branded selfish and uncaring by her older sister, and seems to keep hurting her sensitive little sister. The only friend she seems to have, besides her BFF whom she still can't bring herself to tell the truth to, is a baby alligator she found in the bayou. But despite its current harmlessness, its still forbidden to make an alligator a pet, making it just another secret Livie has to keep.

Feeling like an outsider and full of guilt, Livie tries to stay in the background. But she wants her Mamma to wake up, and she knows that running away isn't going to fix anything. So she decides she has to at least try. But can she, an eleven-year-old tomboy, fix anything when she was the one that broke it in the first place?

Our main character's sad, worried voice is believable right away. You really do feel like you are listening to a heartbroken, scared little girl's thoughts. The town curiosity and her own guarded secrets haunt her, bringing about a quiet despair and tender presentation by the author. There such a feeling of false hope and inevitability of death for Livie's mother that you can sense the denial, while you're doing it yourself.

Little allows Livie's strong guilt to damage her already unsteady relationship with her sister's even further - until finally a healing begins, slowly. It is meaningful and gentle, but the hope does return as our brave and ultimately goodhearted protagonist begins to recognize her responsibilities and flaws.

The Healing Spell is a heartbreaking, yet uplifting, bittersweet story. The character is young, but the premise is most definitely appreciated by an older reader. Kimberley Griffiths Little allows the novel to go to some horrible coming-of-age moments that are extremely sad, present family dynamics that are compelling, honest, and raw, and gives an almost unfinished ending that is both satisfying and tear-jerking, as well as a bit frustrating in its lack of a true conclusion.

But what I can say for sure was that The Healing Spell was worth the read. It is a poignant, sometimes painful, contemporary book that intertwines a little Cajun magic with a terrible family tragedy. Lovely.

***BIBLIOPHILE ALERT! I have been reading like an even crazier book addict than usual this year, and apparently three reviews a week can't keep up pace with me! Because of this, for the entire month of July I will be having FIVE reviews a week! That's right! Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, and Friday! So, please remember to check back here more often during July - and come August I'm planning on returning to three reviews a week. Keep the schedule change in mind, and don't miss any reviews! :)

Comments

Len Lambert said…
I can't wait to read this book! I'm waiting for my copy! Thanks for this beautiful review! :)

Popular posts from this blog

First Step: Admit You Have a Problem

Hi fellow Bibliophiles! I have been rather neglectful to this blog... instead continuing to stay buried in a book as I have during the holidays. I'm hopeful that most of you have been doing this too and can easily accept my apology. Have I been reading? Um, yeah! (Translation: duh.) Just haven't been able to pull myself away long enough to actually WRITE about what I'm reading. Lol. But that's me, a bibliophile, an addict, an addict who's fallen off the wagon and fully embraced her love of reading - especially with all this free time to do so!!! I've also been watching awesome holiday movies, eating yummy, but bad-for-me, food and hanging out with the people I love best! You too? I hope! ;) Anyway, I will return with a new book review next week, most likely on Monday or Tuesday. Thanks for your patience and keep reading!!!

Promotion Celebration for Maximum Ride!!!

Do you love the series Maximum Ride ? How about James Patterson? Are you a huge fan of action-packed books? Well, I’m thrilled to bring to you an opportunity to stock up on some awesome reading!!! ENTER TO WIN A SET OF JAMES PATTERSON PAGETURNERS! MAXIMUM RIDE – IF SHE LIVES, THE WORLD LIVES, IT’S THAT SIMPLE. Read “MAX” - the newest book in the bestselling Maximum Ride series. On sale in paperback 09/01/09! Still reeling from their most recent adventure, Maximum Ride and the rest of the flock must head out to sea to uncover the secret behind a brand new series of disasters—fish are dying off the coast of Hawaii, hundreds of ships are being destroyed. As if that weren’t enough, they’re also being tracked by a criminal mastermind with, oh yeah, an army of mercenaries. Can the flock save themselves and the ocean, and the world, from utter destruction? Now for the rules : The Maximum Ride: Max Promotion is open to legal US residents who are at least 13 years of age as of August 24, 200...

Author Q & A - Jan Eldredge Stops By!

Next Wednesday y'all will be getting my oh-so-humble opinion of Evangeline of the Bayou , the Summer 2018 Kids' Indie Next List selection! (That means it was picked via booksellers at independent bookstores countrywide.) Until then, I have a Q&A with the Louisiana born and raised author herself: Jan Eldredge! (Don't forget to come back next week for my review!!) A Conversation with JAN ELDRIDGE Author of Evangeline of the Bayou 1) The glossary in the back of the book is so helpful! Where did you learn about all these creatures? Which creature from the book is your favorite? I have a small, but growing, collection of books about mythical creatures around the world. If I couldn’t find what I was looking for there, I researched library books, online websites, and the occasional documentary. Something that really surprised me as I started learning more about mythical monsters was the number of different cultures that share very similar ...