We can never leave A novel

H. E. Edgmon

Book - 2025

Five teenage travelers, left behind when their community of inhuman creatures mysteriously disappears, must uncover the truth about what happened while grappling with their own hidden secrets.

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1 copy ordered
Subjects
Genres
Fantasy fiction
Novels
Romans
Published
New York : Wednesday Books 2025.
Language
English
Main Author
H. E. Edgmon (author)
Edition
First edition
Physical Description
pages cm
Audience
Ages 14-18.
ISBN
9781250853653
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Nobody really knows much about the Caravan--not the Caravan-born and certainly not the Caravan-acquired. This patchwork community of the inhuman and magically gifted travels the U.S. in a cluster of camper vans, collecting children like them along the way, but their mechanisms and motivations remain a mystery. When the entire Caravan disappears into thin air and leaves Hugo, Bird, Felix, Eamon, and Calliope behind, the five are forced to struggle through the tangled knots of their intertwined histories to find a safe place to land. And it is a struggle; as Edgmon breaks the fourth wall to assert, this is not a heartwarming story about teens learning to set aside their differences and love one another. Each character is complicated, messy, and angry in their own way, and while the novel's resolution is satisfying, it is more haunting than happy. The astounding beauty of the prose unnervingly normalizes the often gruesome content, folding the reader seamlessly into the mindsets of the teens who are far from recognizing their own severe trauma. Overall, more mystery than action and complete with a potentially daunting six-POV, dual--time line narration, the enthralling storytelling and deeply flawed characters make this a top choice for readers up for a challenge.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Edgmon (The Flicker) dazzles in this supernatural mystery novel in which a traveling caravan hidden from human society provides community for magical creatures with no memory of who they are or where they're from. Then, the morning after the caravan celebrates a new moon, Bird--the pale-skinned half-human grandchild of the caravan's leaders--wakes to find that most of the community has disappeared without a trace. Left behind are pessimistic, pyrokinetic Hugo and his reality-manipulating brother Felix; Calliope, a wolf girl with a venomous bite; and Eamon, a boy made of shadow. Each of them is harboring feelings of frustration, resentment, and distrust, as well as hiding secrets from the others. As they try to solve the mystery of the caravan's disappearance, they must also navigate fraught relationships and the fallout of uncovering the community's darkest truths--all while being hunted by a horrific entity. Alternating POVs are interspersed with occasional cryptic, unaddressed messages and nonlinear flashbacks from before the vanishing. Depictions of the ripple effects of people's choices on their community's most vulnerable members are at the core of this captivating fable of belonging and intergenerational trauma. Ages 14--up. (June)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by School Library Journal Review

Gr 10 Up--The Caravan exists to hide supernatural semi-humans from the world. Some are born into the Caravan, and some are found--and they are always amnesiac about their past. Thanks to horrific rituals and cruelties, no one grows up undamaged. One morning, five Caravan teens find themselves alone. Nonbinary Bird tried to live with their human father, but failed to fit in. Venomous Cal, always a pariah, fights desperate, bloody yearnings. Newcomer Eamon, darkly shadowed, understands neither himself nor his past. Antlered Hugo burns with violent fire, especially since Bird, the soulmate who abandoned him, returned. Gentle Felix, Hugo's brother, wants to keep everyone happy. Embarking on a road trip dripping with vicious words and violence, the five try to make sense of themselves, their relationships, and what has happened to them. This chilling, character-driven thriller has much to recommend it. Switching between viewpoints, a non-chronological story builds the tale between present-day and "before," with occasional interpolations from an intrusive, unidentified narrator. The characters, mostly cued white, are distinct and interesting, if often difficult to like; their upbringing and abilities have left them with few resources to approximate healthy behavior. However, the lyrical language can stray into convoluted metaphors that may pull readers out of the story. Also, the mystery is compelling, but the ending leaves a frustrating number of unanswered questions. Strong language, violence, and disturbing incidents reflect the characters' harrowing pasts. VERDICT Purchase for fans of edgy supernatural thrillers who appreciate morally gray characters and ambiguity.--Rebecca Moore

(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
Review by Kirkus Book Review

On the morning after the new moon, five traumatized teens from a cult of societal outcasts who possess "magics" awaken to discover their entire community has vanished. Three years ago, Bird tried to leave the Caravan, but found they didn't belong in the human world either. The Caravan collects and shelters people with "inhuman characteristics or physical features" and unexplained, sometimes lethal, magical powers. While some are born into the community, like Bird, Hugo (a boy with antlers and fire powers who's Bird's ex), and Felix (Hugo's fawn-eared younger brother), others, like "venomous wolf-girl" Cal and red-eyed Eamon, arrive mysteriously and have no memories of their pasts. Although the Caravan offers a haven, it's vulnerable to being noticed by suspicious humans, who sometimes call the authorities. When Bird, Hugo, Felix, Cal, and Eamon wake up alone after the new moon, they blame each other and themselves. Secrets gnaw at them, and only Felix believes they can work together successfully. With nowhere else to go, they set off in search of Port Haven, Washington, a community like theirs--and the closest thing the Caravan has to an enemy. Chapters alternate among the perspectives of the five teens as well as shifting between past and present, maintaining suspense, tension, and a fast pace. Edgmon crafts horror with vivid imagery and an unknown, ominous threat. Meticulous plotting leads to a satisfying conclusion. The cast of characters is predominantly white-presenting and queer. Precise and cutting. (author's note)(Paranormal. 15-18) Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.