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Review Quotes: "White Rabbit is a luminous, heart-wrenching, and wickedly funny novel about a precocious young girl whose best friend happens to be the ghost of Sylvia Plath. When her father vanishes and her mother retreats into the shadows of her red-lit darkroom--her skin slowly turning blue--she must navigate grief, love, and the desperate stories we weave to survive. At once haunting and tender, it is a tour de force of dazzling originality and voice." -- Kim Taylor Blakemore, author of After Alice FellBiographical Note: Abigail Rose-Marie is a writer from Grand Rapids, Michigan. She holds a PhD in creative writing from Ohio University and an MFA from Bowling Green State University. She currently lives with her wife and their very spoiled pets in Utah. She is the author of The Moonflowers, and her novel, Night Work, in which two female scientists defy societal norms and risk everything to create the first life-saving whooping cough vaccine, is forthcoming from Lake Union. Publisher Marketing: A haunting novel in which a girl grapples with her father's sudden departure and her new companion--the ghost of Sylvia Plath--in a crumbling seaside house that holds more secrets than memories. In a yellow house perched on the crumbling edge of Massachusetts Bay, eleven-year-old Penelope Willows is living in the shadow of loss. Her father is gone, leaving behind only whispers and shadows, while her mother drifts further away each day, lost in her own grief. Left alone in a home that seems frozen in time, Penelope clings to her routines, counting everything she can--logs by the stove, soup cans in the pantry--hoping to hold the world together. But this is no ordinary house. It once belonged to the poet Sylvia Plath, and her presence lingers in every corner, her ghost becoming an unexpected companion to Penelope. As the days stretch on, Penelope begins to hear the echoes of Plath's poetry in the wind, feel her sadness seep into the walls, and see her ghost in the mirrors and empty rooms. When Penelope's mother begins to withdraw further into her own world, leaving Penelope more isolated than ever, the girl's grip on reality starts to fray. Haunted by the absence of her father and the presence of a ghost, Penelope must navigate the treacherous waters of memory, madness, and the fear that she, too, will be lost to the abyss. |
