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Immy and her parents have moved from Australia to a quaint English village. Despite the real estate agent's misgivings, the family chooses Lavender Cottage as their new home--a charming little house with a huge, leafless, evil-looking mulberry tree in the garden. It turns out the entire village is superstitious about the tree, and for good reason: two girls who lived in Lavender Cottage went missing on the eve of their eleventh birthdays, and everyone believes that the mulberry tree snatched them. As her own eleventh birthday approaches, Immy becomes determined to solve the mystery of the girls' disappearance. At the same time, she struggles to cope with her dad's severe depression and to make friends in a village that distrusts outsiders. In the end, a compassionate act of Immy's toward the tree reverses, indeed erases, the curse. The novel's premise is spooky, and the descriptions of the tree and the blighted village are vivid. Although the solution to the mulberry-tree mystery is a bit simplistic, there's more than enough conflict to be found in Immy and her family's relationship with the villagers and the mental health struggles her father faces.
Reviewer: Sarah Berman
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
November, 2020