Ratings2
Average rating3.8
For fans of Jordan Peele’s films, Stranger Things, and The Other Black Girl, Listen To Your Sister is a laugh-out-loud, deeply terrifying, and big-hearted speculative horror novel from electrifying debut talent Neena Viel. Twenty-five year old Calla Williams is struggling since becoming guardian to her brother, Jamie. Calla is overwhelmed and tired of being the one who makes sacrifices to keep the family together. Jamie, full of good-natured sixteen-year-old recklessness, is usually off fighting for what matters to him or getting into mischief, often at the same time. Dre, their brother, promised he would help raise Jamie–but now the ink is dry on the paperwork and in classic middle-child fashion, he’s off doing his own thing. And through it all, The Nightmare never stops haunting Calla: recurring images of her brothers dying that she is powerless to stop. When Jamie’s actions at a protest spiral out of control, the siblings must go on the run. Taking refuge in a remote cabin that looks like it belongs on a slasher movie poster rather than an AirBNB, the siblings now face a new threat where their lives–and reality–hang in the balance. Their sister always warned them about her nightmares. They really should have listened. “A knockout debut." -Ashley Winstead “Incredibly original and seriously scary.” – Nick Medina “A brilliant fever-dream of a novel that effortlessly dances between horror, literary, and family saga—sure to appeal to fans of Grady Hendrix, Tananarive Due, Mona Awad, and Stephen King. – Maria Dong
Reviews with the most likes.
Calla may only be 25, but she feels decades older after gaining guardianship of her younger brother Jamie. Her other brother, middle-child Dre, said he would help, but he's rarely there for her. After misunderstandings leave Jamie in trouble with the law and Dre unable to return to his home, Calla does what she always does: she saves them. The three siblings find themselves staying in a remote cabin straight out of a horror movie as the two brothers try to figure out the mysterious circumstances that led them to run, and Calla deals with the recurring nightmare about Jamie and Dre dying.
The comparisons to Jordan Peele movies are warranted, and I could see his brand of filmmaking bringing this story to the big screen. Viel deftly manages a balance of fever-dream imagery, real-life horrors, and biting humor throughout this debut. Although I don't have siblings of my own, I bought the relationship between Calla, Jamie, and Dre, and thought it gave the novel enough heart that I was willing to stick through some of the uneven pacing of the first half. Some of the writing was confusing, some of it was beautiful, and a lot of it was funny despite the subject matter. Overall, an inventive and memorable debut and something you should read if you like surreal and/or sociopolitical horror novels. 3.5 Spongebob references out of 5, rounded up.