This creepy, quirky debut trilogy opener-think H.P. The deeply atmospheric setting is a standout. The limited art available for review amplifies the spookiness. (Her father, the only character identified by race, is black whether the white default that seems to apply to the rest of the book applies also to Violet is unclear.) While present-tense narration frequently has a bland effect on fantasy, flattening time and the contours of history, here lively characters, droll humor, and steampunk-tinged worldbuilding counter the effect. Other egg seekers include a local author the imperious hotel owner, whose grandfather once possessed it the ghostly Boat Hook Man and Violet’s parents. When a clue leads them to the Eerie Book Dispensary, a mechanical mermonkey steers Violet to a book about the malamander, an aquatic monster that lays a magical egg at Midwinter, then takes it back. He knows she isn’t telling him her whole story-but then, he isn’t telling her (or readers) his, either. Fearless and determined, she recruits Herbie into her schemes. In the dismal offseason, young Herbie Lemon, the Grand Nautilus Hotel’s cautious (he’s heard the legends) Lost-and-Founder, is on the job, keeping warm, when Violet Parma, abandoned at the hotel as an infant 12 years ago, arrives, searching for her lost parents and fleeing pursuit. Not your average coastal getaway, Eerie-on-Sea is brimming with secrets, including its own monster.
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