Reviews for The gates of Evangeline

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

In the first of a planned trilogy, a writer grieving the loss of her 4-year-old son becomes enmeshed with the subjects of her true-crime book-in-progress. Shortly after the tragic death of her only child, Keegan, from a brain aneurysm, Charlotte "Charlie" Cates changes careers. Leaving her job at a Cosmopolitan-like Manhattan magazine, she accepts an assignment from a true-crime publisher to chronicle the disappearance of toddler Gabriel Deveau nearly 30 years before from his home, a Louisiana estate called Evangeline. Shortly after Keegan's death, Charlie began having clairvoyant dreams about children in jeopardy, which have always proven true, and she has had one about Gabriel's fate: it involves a boat, a swamp, and sexual abuse. Once ensconced in a guest cottage at Evangelinethe Deveau family thinks she's there to write a revisionist family historyCharlie begins digging. When one of her visions helps a local police detective, Remy Minot, find solace after his daughter's death, he gives Charlie the inside track on the cold case investigation. After Gabriel vanished from his nursery in 1982, his parents, his much older siblings, his nanny, and her husband were all ruled out as suspects. Now, the widowed matriarch, Hettie Deveau, is dying of cancer and, unbeknownst to the surviving Deveau children, has altered her will, leaving the Deveau fortune to a historical foundation. Tentatively, Charlie begins an affair with Noah, hired by Hettie as a landscaper, who is actually the nanny's grandson. Although from opposite poles socioeconomically, Charlie and Noah have similar issuesboth were raised by grandparents after being abandoned by parents, both have recently undergone messy divorces. When the finger of suspicion begins to point to Noah's father, Sean, who disappeared shortly before Gabriel did, the couple's fledgling relationship is tested. Complications proliferate, and the resolution is improbable, but the hothouse atmosphere of Evangeline and the tortuous and tangled motives of its denizens make for an enjoyable puzzle box of a mystery. An eerie but inviting debut. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


Publishers Weekly
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In Young's haunting, heartbreaking, yet ultimately hopeful debut, the first in a trilogy, Charlotte "Charlie" Cates has disturbing dreams in which unknown children appeal to the divorced Stamford, Conn., journalist for her help; she takes this as evidence of just how thoroughly she has lost it in the months since her four-year-old son, Keegan, died suddenly from a brain aneurysm at his preschool. But that doesn't explain why Charlie seems to be picturing events that haven't yet happened-or the eerie dream about a tiny, abused boy adrift with her in a boat on a bayou, which she has the night after being asked to write a true-crime book about the notorious never-solved 1982 disappearance of two-year-old Gabriel Deveau from his family's Louisiana estate, Evangeline. Several weeks later, she travels to Evangeline, where she investigates a case that, though old, may not be all that cold. Young handles the spectral elements with restraint as her tremendously sympathetic heroine seeks to build a new life after death. Agent: Esmond Harmsworth, Zachary Shuster Harmsworth. (Sept.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.


Book list
From Booklist, Copyright © American Library Association. Used with permission.

Young's debut novel revolves around 39-year-old Charlotte Charlie Cates, a New York journalist and grieving single mother. Mere months before the opening scenes of the book take place, Charlie loses her preschool-aged son, Keegan, to a freak medical issue. In the throes of Charlie's depression, her professional world is suddenly tipped on its head as well. Desperate for something new, she dips back into her past as a true-crime writer when invited to author a book about the sensational and long-unsolved disappearance of the youngest member of a wealthy Louisiana family. She goes to live, and work, at the fantastic estate of the Deveau family, who clearly have no shortage of secrets. But Charlie carries a secret of her own. Charlie gets visits visions, really of children in trouble. They talk to her. And they ask for her help. This gothic-style mystery is by turns chilling and deeply touching. Young adeptly makes the reader experience Charlie's emotional journey through her grief and rediscovery of herself, all while coming to terms with her special, and sometimes terrifying, psychic gifts.--Kuczwara, Dawn Copyright 2017 Booklist

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