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Black Dove
Black Dove | Colin McAdam
2 posts | 2 read | 1 to read
A deeply imaginative and thrilling novel about grief, single parenting, and the terrifying power of a child's imagination, dancing on an edge between magical realism and horror, perfect for fans of Stranger Things In a tall and narrow house, on a stained and busy street, live twelve-year-old Oliver and his father, a story-loving writer. Haunted by the ghost of his alcoholic mother, Oliver finds comfort in his father’s impromptu tales: the Black Dove, an elusive flower that gives strength; the girl who consumes it as she battles attackers and yearns for happier realms. Stories where lonely souls keep searching despite their losses and grief. Running from a bully one night, Oliver hides in a junk shop owned by an enigmatic man. Soon, instead of hiding in the janitor’s closet after school, Oliver spends afternoons in the shop, a cavernous place full of storied oddities and grubby wonders where creatures rise up from the basement. A snake in the shape of a boy. A hunter named Night, part panther, part hound, who proves to Oliver that the world holds invisible wonder. Wanting to forget his mother, afraid of his own genes, constantly harassed by bullies, Oliver joins the shop owner in experimenting with dangerous forms of genetic editing. Meanwhile, he meets the girl from across the street, and their friendship grows in a neighbourhood where magic is real, where murderers gather, and where the darker consequences of fantasies play out. A twisting story of grief and revenge, Black Dove is a thrilling read with its own kind of magic. In rich but tightly reined prose, McAdam celebrates the value and shortfalls of storytelling, finding a light in all the darkness to conjure a tender portrait of childhood’s end.
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review
Addison_Reads
Black Dove | Colin McAdam
post image
Mehso-so

#Scarathlon #SpookyGhostClub @Clwojick

I am so torn on how to review this book. First off, if you have any interest in this one, do not listen to the audiobook. It was the only version my library had, and I feel this book just really didn't work in that format.

The book follows a sad young boy and is told through stories his father tells him. It is hard to follow what is real and what is imaginary as the story unravels.

Clwojick Stunning cover though! 1y
28 likes1 comment
review
hdhubbard
Black Dove | Colin McAdam
Mehso-so

?/10

I don't know what to rate this. Well written, slightly gruesome, and the end left me feeling sad. The kind of sad where you are missing someone or something, but it's been long enough to dull the edges of the hurt. I wouldn't read it again, but would be open to reading other books by this author.