Buried

This title was previously available on NetGalley and is now archived.
Buy on BN.com Buy on Bookshop.org
*This page contains affiliate links, so we may earn a small commission when you make a purchase through links on our site at no additional cost to you.
Send NetGalley books directly to your Kindle or Kindle app

1
To read on a Kindle or Kindle app, please add kindle@netgalley.com as an approved email address to receive files in your Amazon account. Click here for step-by-step instructions.
2
Also find your Kindle email address within your Amazon account, and enter it here.
Pub Date Mar 19 2013 | Archive Date Apr 16 2013

Description

Like every resident of Fane’s Cove, Cadence McKenna knows her town is, well, odd. And yet, they’re accustomed to the near-daily supernatural happenings - so accustomed, in fact, that when Gray Addison moves to town and stays, she is shocked to find that she’s the only one who insists that there must be something strange about him.

With her life-long - if minor - psychic sensitivity handed down from her grandmother, she knows that what she feels isn’t simple paranoia. After all, how many normal guys pay no mind to random poltergeist activity occurring right in front of them?

Cadence can’t dismiss her feelings until she understands why he’s in Fane’s Cove. Even if it means sticking her neck out by pretending to get close to him... and learning more about her town’s history than anyone would ever want to know.

Like every resident of Fane’s Cove, Cadence McKenna knows her town is, well, odd. And yet, they’re accustomed to the near-daily supernatural happenings - so accustomed, in fact, that when Gray...


Available Editions

EDITION Other Format
ISBN 9781620072196
PRICE $13.99 (USD)

Average rating from 5 members


Featured Reviews

Not set

What's Interesting: Knowing that your town is odd in a supernatural way! Having a minor psychic sensitivity and feeling paranoid so something is going on! Seeing a new guy move in-even though the town usually drives away visitors-and she sees him acting weird! And learning more about the town's history and why it is the way that it is!

Not set
Was this review helpful?
Not set

Buried
is a well-written, very original young adult urban fantasy, and is far better than some of the offerings from much larger publishing houses. It is well thought-out, well finished and very streamlined. Nothing necessary is missed and nothing is overdone. It flows well, unravelling the mystery at just the right pace, and the plot has enough twists and turns to keep you on your toes. 

The story is about two teens. The boy, Grey,  has just arrived in Cadence's town. Yes, he's the new boy in school, and, yes, he is cute, but that's as far as the cliched YA beginning goes.  The story soon became unique; Cadence is barely aware of his cuteness, what bugs her about him is that he is not remotely perturbed by the strange poltergeist activities in the town. The town has always been like that, but someone from outside should be freaked out by dusters flying, unthrown by human hands, at a teacher, and other such things.

So Cadence makes up a reason to talk to him and so the fun begins. Grey has lived with such strange goings-on his whole life. They follow his family around and he's here to  find out what happened to one of his ancestors in the hope that he can get the hauntings to stop.
Apparently this is his thing and is of no interest to his parents who have the absent parent syndrome often found in YA books. (I get the impression that the current thinking for some is that you want to cut the number of words down, or save parental complications in the plot, just write the parents out of it.) For me, it's the weakest part of this story. Parents always being somewhere else is less believable to me than the supernatural aspect.

Cadence doesn't want to be his girlfriend, but Grey is clearly interested in her and despite Cae's reticence their relationship meanders into romance as they set out to solve the mystery of Grey's lost ancestor. 

The main characters are well-drawn and likeable, and Cae is not unlike my own heroine of the Diamond Peak Series, Ariel, in her reticence to get all girly giggly over a guy and her courage in facing the unknown.

It's a solid YA fantasy that reads more like contemporary fiction for much of the book, the withy demon stuff only coming in at the end. The end is unexpected and I presume there will be a follow-up because something fairly major has happened which warrants some further exploration. 

Not set
Was this review helpful?

Readers who liked this book also liked: