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Julie Amherst is adrift. Her father is gone, suddenly, without warning, and her sister, the only family she has left, has cut contact. At age nineteen, Julie finds herself alone in the quiet stillness of her childhood home, surrounded by memories that now echo with absence. The house is filled with ghosts, not of the paranormal kind, but of a life she once knew. The silence is louder than she expected.
In an effort to pull her from the darkness, Julie's childhood friends, Lainey, Micah, Jacob, and Callie, gather for a weekend reunion. It's supposed to be comforting, a return to the simplicity of summers past. But what begins as an attempt at healing turns into something far stranger. Deep in the woods behind Julie's house, they find a girl. She's injured, terrified, and undeniably not human. Her name is Isabelle. Her blood runs blue. Her silver eyes shimmer with something ancient. And she wants to stay hidden.
Taking her in, the group quickly realizes Isabelle is not only otherworldly, but deeply connected to something, or someone, from Julie's past. As they work to keep Isabelle safe, old tensions resurface: the friction of first love, unresolved arguments, unspoken grief. And Julie, still navigating the weight of her father's death, begins to uncover an unexpected link between this strange, celestial girl and the mother she's never met.
Seven Feathers is more than a supernatural coming-of-age story, it's a tender exploration of grief, memory, and the quiet alchemy of healing. And in today's world, that exploration couldn't be more timely. In the United States, 1 in 14 children, over 5 million, will experience the death of a parent or sibling before the age of 18. That number jumps to more than 13 million by age 25. Yet despite this staggering reality, most teens feel alone in their grief. Loss at that age isn't just painful, it's isolating, confusing, and often invisible to the outside world.
Amanda Denham writes into this silence with empathy and imagination. Through Julie's journey, she gives young readers a place to put their questions: What happens when someone dies? How do we carry loss when it doesn't make sense? What does healing look like when we don't even know where to start?
As Isabelle's condition worsens, and the line between the earthly and the ethereal begins to blur, Julie must face not only the truth about who Isabelle is, but who she herself is becoming. The girl who once stood frozen in grief is now forced to choose what kind of strength she's willing to grow into. And in doing so, she reclaims a sense of agency over her pain.
Research shows that teens who experience death are significantly more likely to struggle with depression, anxiety, and long-term academic decline. But those with strong peer support and opportunities to process grief openly are far more resilient. Seven Feathers offers just that, a mirror for young readers, a story that doesn't flinch from loss, but also doesn't let it define the end. It reminds us that sometimes, love doesn't come with answers. It comes with staying. With bearing witness. With choosing to walk with someone through the dark, even when the path ahead isn't clear.
Julie keeps seven feathers from Isabelle. Not because she understands everything, but because she's willing to remember. They become her talismans, not just of loss, but of transformation. Of friendship. Of the deep, mysterious hope that sometimes, what we think is the end... is only the beginning of something else.
Seven Feathers is a story for anyone who has ever stood in the shadow of loss and asked, "What now?" It's a novel that invites readers to feel, question, and most importantly, heal. A gently...