Seed

Seed Book Cover Seed
Lisa Heathfield
Juvenile Fiction
Running Press Kids
2015-03-10
336

All that Pearl knows can be encapsulated in one word: Seed. It is the isolated community that she was born into. It is the land that she sows and reaps. It is the center of her family and everything that means home. And it is all kept under the watchful eye of Papa S. At fifteen years old, Pearl is finally old enough to be chosen as Papa S.’s companion. She feels excitement . . . and surprising trepidation that she cannot explain. The arrival of a new family into the Seed community—particularly the teenage son, Ellis—only complicates the life and lifestyle that Pearl has depended upon as safe and constant. Ellis is compelling, charming, and worldly, and he seems to have a lot of answers to questions Pearl has never thought to ask. But as Pearl digs to the roots of the truth, only she can decide what she will allow to come to the surface. Lisa Heathfield’s suspenseful, scintillating debut features a compelling voice that combines blithe naïveté, keen observation, and sincere emotion.

 

Review:

Well, that escalated quickly.

Those are the words to most accurately described my feelings toward “Seed”, a book about a teenaged girl living on a cult compound with a fear of the outside world.  The cult is well-developed and the creepiness of it (and believe me, it tips the creepy scale) is revealed in a way consistent with the view of Pearle, the narrator.  Everything is presented naturally, without much explanation, but her observations adequately clue in the reader to what she cannot see.

The plot moves at a slow, though steady, pace.  This is good, because things at Seed do not change quickly.  In fact, they rarely change at all.  The characters are well-developed and for the most part sympathetic.  It’s very easy to feel sympathy for the innocents and hope they finally realize they are not in a good place.   That is the first 99% of the book.

The last 1% of the book is a whirlwind that needed quite a bit more exploration.  There were subplots introduced that had nothing to do with the conclusion and had no resolution.  That space would have been much better used to make the actual conclusion more cohesive.  I understand that there is a point where things would speed up rapidly, and the author is trying to convey this, but it was such a disorienting jumble that it cost an entire star in my rating.

If you like reading about cults, or things that make your skin crawl in general, then you may wish to give “Seed” a try as long as you go into it with the knowledge the very end may fall short of your expectations.  It is most definitely for high schoolers and adults.  The content is not explicit but very much present.

This review is based upon a complimentary copy provided by the publisher in exchange for an honest review.

 

Content Warning:

Strongly Implied Sexual Content, Brief Language, Violence, Abuse

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