Ratings8
Average rating3.3
“This beautifully strange book of the mountains is alarming and inspiring."—Samantha Hunt, author of The Unwritten Book A haunting, imaginative, and twisting tale of two sisters and the menacing, unexplained forces that threaten them and their rural mountain community. In 1980s Appalachia, sisters Sheila and Angie couldn’t be more different. While their mother works long shifts at the nearby asylum, Sheila does her best to care for their home and keeps to herself, even when enduring relentless bullying from classmates. Her rambunctious, fearless younger sister, Angie, is more focused on fighting imaginary zombies, and creating tarot-like cards that seem to have a mind of their own. When the brutal murder of two female hikers on the nearby Appalachian Trail stuns their small community, the sisters find themselves tangled in a dangerous game of cat and mouse. Angie discovers a ripped shirt, soaked in blood; money Sheila’s been stashing away disappears; and a strange man shows up at a local store, trying to barter with a woman’s watch. As the threat of violence looms larger, the mysterious, ancient mountain they live on—and their willingness to trust each other—might be the only things that can save them from the darkness consuming their home. In turns both terrifying and otherworldly, author Alisa Alering opens the door to the hidden world of Smothermoss—a mountain that sighs, monsters made of ink, rabbits both dead and alive, and ropes that just won’t come undone. Unsettling, propulsive, and wonderfully atmospheric, Alering’s stunning debut novel renegotiates what is seen and unseen, what is real and what is haunted.
Reviews with the most likes.
This book was really strange. It had some really unique elements to it and I was weirdly hooked to the story.
The two sisters had some serious weird vibes but the more the book went on, the more I appreciated their uniqueness and the beauty of their souls.
It has some really cool supernatural elements to it as well.
the writing is amazing and the narration really suited the tone of the book.
There are two murders in the wildness and the girls have very different reactions to it. I think the story is really about how these two very different girls come to appreciate each other during a dangerous time.
It was different but a seriously excellent read
4 stars
This was such a strange nugget of a novel, in the best possible way. I picked it up thinking it was a horror novel, but I don???t quite think it???s that, either. Despite that though, it???s a wonderful read.
The core of this novel is about the two sisters, Sheila and Angie, and how they deal with their lives - lives that, incidentally, are in flux, as Sheila and Angie both grow towards new stages in their lives (Sheila towards adulthood, and Angie towards her teen years). In a way this story is all about navigating those shifts: in themselves, in their relationship with each other, and in the way they navigate the world around them. This alone would make for a potentially interesting coming-of-age story, but there???s the added layer of strangeness that follows the two characters. Sheila, for instance, lives with an invisible noose around her neck she can???t take off. Angie, in the meantime, has these monster cards that she draws herself on index cards, and which seem to have a mind of their own.
But those aren???t the only ???weird??? elements in this story. There???s the rabbits, for instance: both the ones that the sisters??? family keeps for food, and the wild ones that inhabit the mountain on which they live. In this novel they stand for a whole host of things: innocence and vulnerability, of course, but also the quiet menace of the hunted turning on the hunter. There???s also the mountain itself, which is practically a character in its own right that exerts its influence on the sisters and a few other characters throughout the story.
All of these elements are brought together in the author???s writing, which has a tone reminiscent of folktales and fables. Events and images come together in ways that don???t make any kind of logical sense unless one is willing to squint, tilt one???s head, and see everything with fairytale logic. To be clear, that???s not an insult to the writing, because the quality of it is such that it IS possible to view the plot as a kind of folktale and have it all make perfect sense. It kind of reminds me a bit of the podcast Old Gods of Appalachia, and actually tempts me to find the audiobook version of this book just to see if it has a similar feel.
As for the themes, they do kind of fall in line with the usual themes of folktales and fairytales: coming of age, exploration of one???s sexuality, the dangers and wonders of the natural world. But there are other important themes here too, such as the crushing poverty can squeeze a soul down into a shade of itself, and how that poverty can make it difficult to escape one???s circumstances and find a better life. It also tackles the ways humanity alters the natural world for the worse, and how those changes can come right back to haunt us - as has been illustrated recently in the most horrible way by the storm and subsequent floods that ravaged Asheville, North Carolina and neighboring areas.
Overall, this was a lovely and lush little read that is less horror and more Grimm???s fairytale in terms of feel, but the themes are very much real and contemporary. Some readers might not like the tone, or the fact that there are very many questions that are asked and never given answers, but readers who are willing to simply go with the novel???s flow will find themselves charmed.
There have a been a few times when I think that maybe reading a book in the middle of the night instead of sleeping affects my comprehension of said book. This was the case with Smothermoss. I do not know what happened in this book.