Reviews for The Rabbit Back Literature Society

Kirkus
Copyright © Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

"Secret members, stolen notebooks, pilfered writing ideasit was all so ridiculous!" So rages Jskelinen's exasperated heroine, and she does have a point. Mystery is the thing in this strange, dreamlike fantasy that explores the power of stories and those who write them and what happens when the buried secrets of an exclusive group of authors threaten to overtake the laws of nature. In the town of Rabbit Back, revered children's novelist Laura White has taken nine writers under her wing as the mysterious Rabbit Back Literary Society, and she chooses Ella Milana, a young literature teacher, to take the coveted 10th spot in the group. But at the party to celebrate Ella's membership, White suddenly disappears as her house fills with snow. Children in town soon report disturbing nightmares about White's body showing up to read her stories to them, and Ella determines to use her ties to the Literary Society to research the true story of White's life and the fate of the original 10th member, who died years ago. But the rules of The Game, a ritual dictated by the society's members, require that every confession be a two-way street. At its best, the novel gives a compelling view of the strangeness that lurks beneath the most "normal" places and people, and it draws on elements of myth, fairy tale and ghost story to increase the scary factor. Sometimes, Jskelinen hits the right creepy note to make the hairs on the neck stand up, but sometimes the story crosses the line into just too weird. Has some Twin Peaks moments even if it tries a little too hard. Still, read with all the lights on! Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.


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

On the night of her inauguration as the tenth and final member of the Rabbit Back Literature Society, Ella witnesses the disappearance of the group's benefactress, beloved children's author Laura White. The world may mourn the loss of the creator of the Creatureville characters, but the other nine members of the society are anxious to keep the secrets that have united them through the decades since their own induction as gifted children. Hoping to discover what really happened the night Laura vanished and captivated by the discovery that a young boy once held the place she now occupies, Ella is lured by the promise of the Game, a ritual that requires members to challenge each other to reveal their truest, most private thoughts. With an uncanny understanding of authorial insecurities and a freakishly honed sense of the supernatural origin of literary inventiveness, acclaimed Finnish novelist Jääskeläinen eerily explores the nature of creative inspiration, incisively exposes writers' desperate aspirations, and suggestively unveils the price one pays to have one's dreams fulfilled.--Haggas, Carol Copyright 2015 Booklist


Library Journal
(c) Copyright Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Ella Milana, a language teacher in the town of Rabbit Back, Finland, receives an invitation to join the Rabbit Back Literature Society. This small, elite group was founded by Laura White, a children's author famous for her "Creatureville" series. Ella notices that words are rearranging themselves on the pages of the books in the local library. (The librarian is also a member of the society.) What other secrets does the society hide? And what is the Game in which members "spill" (as in spill their guts)? Why and where has Laura White disappeared? Is the society covering up a dark deed from the past? Written by an award-winning Finnish author just beginning to publish here, the novel starts out very slowly and meanders around these questions until the reader doesn't care much one way or the other. Although the author makes many clever and witty observations along the way, the story reads like a creative writing exercise that goes on for too long. VERDICT This quirky Nordic tale is really a satire on writers and writing disguised as a mystery. Those seeking a more traditional mystery (and a more enjoyable read) should look elsewhere.-Leslie Patterson, Rehoboth, MA (c) Copyright 2014. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Back