cover image The Absence of Sparrows

The Absence of Sparrows

Kurt Kirchmeier. Little, Brown, $16.99 (336p) ISBN 978-0-316-45092-8

In their community of Griever’s Mill, Ben Cameron, 11, and his brother Pete, 12, witness the first “darkening,” a storm that looks “like coal smoke, the kind you’d see billowing out from a locomotive, all thick and dark woolen gray.” The darkness leaves behind a single victim, local grocer George Crandall, who is turned into an obsidian glass statue, just like hundreds of people across the country. Kirchmeier’s debut novel focuses on two brothers’ very different attempts to try to save their family and the world from horrific events. While Ben focuses on the birds in the backyard, tracking their comings and goings to determine if his theory that they are guiding souls back to their glass-ified bodies is correct, Pete becomes more obsessed with the voice on the radio claiming that the only way to end the darkness is by shattering all the glass-ified people. Creepy and engaging, Kirchmeier’s story delves into sibling relationships, mental health, and survival. Ben grapples with bullies, the loss of a parent, and questions about faith and the afterlife, and Kirchmeier uses the character’s increasingly anxious voice to effectively toe the line of real-world horrors and fantastical terrors. Ages 8–12. [em]Agent: Ali Herring, Spencerhill Associates. (May) [/em]