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A review by queer_bookwyrm
She Is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran
dark
emotional
mysterious
sad
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
4.0
4 ⭐ CW: body horror, sleep paralysis, death of a parent, immolation, racism, cursing
She is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran is a YA horror about a Vietnamese-American girl struggling with identity and family reconciliation amid a haunted house.
We follow Jade, who is visiting her father with her younger sister in Vietnam, as he fixes up an old French Colonial house. Jade's father has been estranged from the family for a long time, but has made a deal that if she stays the summer, then he will give her the money she needs to go to college at UPenn. Then Jade realizes that the house is haunted by a racist, French colonizer who is tormenting her as she did another Vietnamese girl who lived there.
Jade is a bit of an angsty teen girl, angry at her father and making not great decisions. But we soon realized that her father put too much on her when she was young instead of taking responsibility. Jade carries the weight of being the oldest daughter, as well as trying to navigate her Vietnamese-American identity. Throughout the book we see her struggle with not feeling Vietnamese enough. Jade is also coming to terms with being bisexual.
I liked Jade's relationship with Florence and the juxtaposition of their two very different personalities. The hauntings are really visceral and creepy! The interplay between dreams and real hauntings makes reality hard to parse out. A lot of disturbing descriptions. We get themes of how colonialism is a rot upon a country. The racist ghost, Marion, rotted from the inside when she died in the house, so get plenty of imagery of rotting food, parasites and dead bugs. It's ironic that Marion always referred to the Vietnamese people as parasites, when she herself became a parasite of the house after death.
This was a super creepy read and perfect for spooky season. I'm really enjoying all this diverse horror! This would make for a great horror movie.
She is a Haunting by Trang Thanh Tran is a YA horror about a Vietnamese-American girl struggling with identity and family reconciliation amid a haunted house.
We follow Jade, who is visiting her father with her younger sister in Vietnam, as he fixes up an old French Colonial house. Jade's father has been estranged from the family for a long time, but has made a deal that if she stays the summer, then he will give her the money she needs to go to college at UPenn. Then Jade realizes that the house is haunted by a racist, French colonizer who is tormenting her as she did another Vietnamese girl who lived there.
Jade is a bit of an angsty teen girl, angry at her father and making not great decisions. But we soon realized that her father put too much on her when she was young instead of taking responsibility. Jade carries the weight of being the oldest daughter, as well as trying to navigate her Vietnamese-American identity. Throughout the book we see her struggle with not feeling Vietnamese enough. Jade is also coming to terms with being bisexual.
I liked Jade's relationship with Florence and the juxtaposition of their two very different personalities. The hauntings are really visceral and creepy! The interplay between dreams and real hauntings makes reality hard to parse out. A lot of disturbing descriptions. We get themes of how colonialism is a rot upon a country. The racist ghost, Marion, rotted from the inside when she died in the house, so get plenty of imagery of rotting food, parasites and dead bugs. It's ironic that Marion always referred to the Vietnamese people as parasites, when she herself became a parasite of the house after death.
This was a super creepy read and perfect for spooky season. I'm really enjoying all this diverse horror! This would make for a great horror movie.
Graphic: Body horror, Death of parent, and Fire/Fire injury
Moderate: Cursing and Racism