Genesis 5020

Stories for His Glory

The Girl Who Could See by Kara Swanson June 29, 2017

Filed under: Book Reviews — Melissa Finnegan @ 12:58 pm
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About the Book

Book title: The Girl Who could See

Author: Kara Swanson

Release date: June 1, 2017

Genre: Science Fiction/Urban Fantasy/Young Adult

All her life Fern has been told she is blind to reality—but, what if she is the only one who can truly see?

Fern Johnson is crazy. At least, that’s what the doctors have claimed since her childhood. Now nineteen, and one step away from a psych ward, Fern struggles to survive in bustling Los Angeles. Desperate to appear normal, she represses the young man flickering at the edge of her awareness—a blond warrior only she can see.

Tristan was Fern’s childhood imaginary hero, saving her from monsters under her bed and outside her walls. As she grew up and his secret world continued to bleed into hers, however, it only caused catastrophe. But, when the city is rocked by the unexplainable, Fern is forced to consider the possibility that this young man is not a hallucination after al—and that the creature who decimated his world may be coming for hers.

 

About the Author

As the daughter of missionaries, KARA SWANSON spent sixteen years of her young life in the jungles of Papua New Guinea. Able to relate with characters dropped suddenly into a unique new world, she quickly fell in love with the speculative genre and was soon penning stories herself. At seventeen, she independently published her debut fantasy novel, Pearl of Merlydia. Her short story is included in Kathy Ide’s 21 Days of Joy: Stories that Celebrate Mom. She has published many articles, including one in the Encounter magazine, and she received the Mount Hermon Most Promising Teen Writer award in 2015.

 

Guest Post from Kara Swanson

Did you have an imaginary friend growing up? I did. And I think most of us probably understood what it was like to use our childhood imaginations to create friends and take us places.

 

The Girl Who Could See follows Fern Johnson, a young woman who’s imaginary friend, Tristan, first appeared in her life when she was eight years old—and has never left. Now nineteen, Fern still sees Tristan, only he is no longer her friend. Now he is her curse. The source of her insanity. The reason Fern cannot keep a job and has been passed from one psychologist to another. The reason she is one step away from a psych ward. However, Tristan disagrees. He says that he’s not a figment of Fern’s imagination and is determined to prove it. But, if his existence is real, it has dangerous implications not only for Fern, but for her world. Because the creature that decimated Tristan’s planet is coming for Earth—and only the girl everyone says is crazy can stop it.

 

I wrote the novella as a way to explore the idea of what would happen if someone had an imaginary friend who never left. What would the psychological and daily implications be? And what if that imaginary friend wasn’t imaginary? The story that grew from those sparks of ideas became an adventure that I hope you’ll enjoy as much as I did. 🙂

Blog Stops

June 27: A Baker’s Perspective

June 27: A Simply Enchanted Life

June 27: Debbie’s Dusty Deliberations

June 28: Kristin’s Book Reviews

June 28: Christian Chick’s Thoughts

June 29: Fiction Aficionado

June 29: Genesis 5020

June 30: Smiling Book Reviews

June 30: The Fizzy Pop Collection

July 1: Blogging With Carol

July 1: remembrancy

July 2: Inklings and notions

July 2: Ashley’s Bookshelf

July 3: Zerina Blossom’s Books

July 3: Margaret Kazmierczak

July 4: Book by Book

July 4: Book Bites, Bee Stings, & Butterfly Kisses

July 5: Dragons Read History

July 5: Through the Open Window

July 6: It’s Storytime with Van Daniker

July 6: Baker Kella

July 7: Pause for Tales

July 7: Edits and Reviews By Leslie

July 8: Books, Books, and More Books.

July 8: Pursuing Stacie

July 8: The Important Things in Life: God, Books, & Chocolate

July 9: Reader’s cozy corner

July 9: A path of joy

July 10: Neverending Stories

July 10: Henry Happens

Giveaway

To celebrate her tour, Kara is giving away a $25 Amazon Gift Card!! Click below to enter. Be sure to comment on this post before you enter to claim 9 extra entries! https://promosimple.com/ps/b7f6

My thoughts:

I really enjoyed this book. From the beginning you are drawn into this crazy world that Fern finds herself a part of.

At first I didn’t want to like Tristan but I quickly realized he wasn’t the bad guy at all.

This short little book (you can read this one fast) is full of action, there is never a dull moment. The questions of what is going on, what happen to Fern when she was younger are constantly swirling around. I still never had a full picture of how Fern ended up in the hospital when she was younger, I felt like some of that never became completely clear.

However, that didn’t take away from my enjoyment of the book. There where some lines in the book I even highlighted because the things Tristan said to Fern reminded me of things Jesus would say to us. Just as Fern had to believe in Tristan even if others don’t we must do the same with Jesus.

I had tears filling my eyes at the end. This book touched me emotionally, which says something.

I definitely recommend this book no matter your age, if you like books that are a bit different this book is for you.

Grab your copy at your local bookstore, Amazon, or your favorite retailer.

This book was given to me through the Celebrate Lit Team. All opinions are my own. 

 

8 Responses to “The Girl Who Could See by Kara Swanson”

  1. carylkane Says:

    Sounds awesome!

  2. Kristin Says:

    Great book 🙂

  3. MH Says:

    Thanks for the interview and review! Sounds like a book I need to pick up soon!

  4. Kara_Author Says:

    Thank you so much for having my novella on your blog and for your lovely review! 🙂 ❤

  5. honeybeerosewritings Says:

    I truly want to read this book because it was one of my favorite genres.

  6. honeybeerosewritings Says:

    I truly want to read this book because it IS one of my favorite genres. (Lol, on my previous typo comment.)


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