My rating: 4 of 5 stars
3.5 stars
I received this book for free in exchange for an honest review. This does not affect my opinion of the book or the content of my review.
Nephthys Kinwell was not a savior of souls.
Set in 1977 around Washington, D.C., Creatures of Passage was a Magical Realism and Fantasy story that centered around members of the Kinwell family. Nephthys' twin brother Osiris was murdered and the pain of losing him and not knowing the who and why of him eventually being found in the Anacostia river have caused her to become an alcoholic. Nephthys is emotionally lost without her twin and so spends her time driving around in a 1967 Plymouth Belvedere, that has the ghost of a murdered white girl in the trunk, and transports people that she gets a feeling about that need her.
And when Nephthys looked at her niece, she loved her and hated her too.
Nephthys' niece, Amber, is whispered about and thought to be a witch because of the dreams she has of people's upcoming death. Amber's dream of her own father's death when she was twelve and not being able to save him is why Nephthys can't really stand to be around her, as her pain makes her blame Amber. When Dash, Amber's ten year old son and Nephthys' great nephew, comes to her after school one day, it throws Nephthys for a little bit of a loop but gets her to think about the remaining family she has left as Dash says he thinks his mother has dreamed of his own death.
But more than anything, he remembered his grandmother saying: “We just going round and round, we creatures of passage. And we gonna keep going round till we understand the Loop.”
As this is also a fantasy story, we get murdered Osiris' story too and the journey he is going on after death. This part could have a content warning
as racism and it's violence leads to Osiris' murder. The story was broken up into five parts with the first introducing some of the characters and getting the reader into the world and the tone of the story. This was told in a very flowing way, I can only think of one “corner” in the story, each character and their story, flows into the next with the Kinwells being the backbone. I'm usually one for a very linear story but the flow really worked for me here. As Nephthys picked up a passenger to bring them where they wanted to go, we flowed into that character's story, sometimes only a couple paragraphs and sometimes longer as they and their story played a bigger part in the overall picture.
For he sensed he was being hunted and handed a plate at the same time; given an offer without a choice.
The second part also had a difficult
part to read as Dash, without fully understanding what he is seeing, comes upon the school janitor, Mercy, sexually abusing a girl. That scene is from Dash's point of view and so, not clear but the story then flows into Mercy's pov and goes back to him as a child experiencing his own abuse and then how he grows up to become the abuser himself. This flows into and with another character that Nephthys has picked up, Rosetta, and there was a heavy content warning scene depicting Rosetta's abuse.
And that was when he knew—as all ghosts do—that death is just another kind of living.
After the heavier, less placed in fantasy second part, the third part brings in more of the myth and mysticism that cloaks the overall story. The fantasy and magical realism world-building wasn't complex, it's Kingdom of Virginia instead of a State, so don't go into this wanting that kind of fantasy. It's more of the character of Wolf and how Osiris is traveling through the Twelve Hours of the Night and trying to get out of The Conundrum of the Three (think Purgatory). It's about flowing the stories of life, the sadness, anger, pain, fight, love, and people with myths and allegory to teach, explain, and try and make meaning out of.
There was a girl who was there but now she was gone.
Around the fourth part is where I thought the story started to lose some of it's steam as it took just a little bit too long to get to where it was flowing. The fourth part brings in a character that had previously been wondered about, Dash's father, and we get his story that flows into the fifth and final part. The final part has most of our lost souls flow together and while there is no definite happy ending as life flows on, there was a feeling for at least in this moment, it felt settled.
There were so many others, countless passengers, each with burdens that kept them frozen even as they moved from one place to the next.
The list of characters in this could seem like a lot but I can't think of one that was wasted, each was powerful in their own way and I would definitely read a story about Find Out. I could see some readers having difficulty with the flow of the story, how characters and their stories bleed into one another and while the overall backbone of the story is linear, the time flows back and forth as characters and their personal stories get told. I ended up really liking the way the story was told because of how each character left us with almost like Easter eggs of how they and their actions affected other characters earlier and later in the story. It all goes back to the flowing feel of the story and how time and people flow in and out of each other's lives, really great way to tell a story.
But most of all, he'd always wondered, down through the ages in different realms, how these creatures of passage could be so careless.
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