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Paperback Book Details
  • 10/2023
  • 9781639888481 B0CLQNX1BQ
  • 252 pages
  • $15.99
Talisman: Gifts of the Shavtal
Toni Yap, author
When twelve-year-old Georgina Trabeck found her pregnant mother lying on the floor, unconscious, she did something she had never done before—she called 911. Step-Dad had warned her never to call the police or tell anyone about what happened at home. But this was the final straw. Her fear turned to anger, and, to her surprise, her ability to see people’s auras was suddenly heightened. Since the age of six, GiGi’s gift of seeing colors had warned her to hide in her bedroom and protect her three-year-old sister Chrissy or avoid the boys who bullied her at school for being Filipino. More troubling now is a black cloud aura she has seen wrapped around Step-Dad’s neck. She can tell it plagues him, and she can mentally manipulate it—an ability that allows her to fight back against him. With the help of her best friend, Danae Jenkins, and as her aura reading skills strengthen, she attracts a Sidhe Fairy Irra, who confronts Gi-Gi with a talisman and the shocking news that they are related. The fairy warns Gi-Gi not to use it for revenge, but Gig-Gi can’t rest until she knows the truth about what happened to Denae’s parents, even if it means risking their friendship and enraging Step-Dad. Talisman - Gifts of the Shavtal is a magical journey about a young girl born with a gift only granted to creatures from the Other World. She must learn to use it wisely if she wants to save the people she loves.
Reviews
Yap’s debut blends the 1970s coming-of-age story of a 12-year-old Filipina-American facing abuse with a fantasy of auras, fae, chatty crows, and other surprises. Georgina, aka Gina or Gi-Gi, has been through a lot: bearing witness to her mother's abuse at the hands of her stepdad, enduring bullying and racism from her classmates, and making sense of the auras that she has seen since she was young, like the “cotton-candy pink and shades of faded orange” of her mother, in her most “loving mode.” But things changed one night when her stepdad—aura: a coiled black cloud—went too far. Since then, Gina has been able to use her ability to affect those around her. With this awakening, she meets the twins Irra and Ravanna, who boast pointed ears and “fang-like teeth” and reveal the truth about Gina’s powers: she is half fae, and all three of them share the same father.

Irra gifts Gina a talisman, a fae family heirloom, created when Gina was born, that enhances the wearer's power, and Yap's story explores what happens when a young girl receives a great power and no guidance in mastering it. Except for a neighbor, Mrs. Jenkins, no adults have stepped in to stop the abuse in Gina’s life, so of course Gina, endowed with potent new agency, will strive to protect her family, despite the warning emblazoned on her keepsake pendant: “With this talisman, I bear the responsibility of my new powers, never to use them for revenge.”

Yap explores themes of abuse and racism with jolting frankness, and the story moves briskly, with emotional urgency, though the prose often lacks polish and dialogue tends toward the expository. (Characters declare things like “It’s the 1970s” with regularity.) The mechanics of aura-reading are smartly left intuitive, without explicit rules, and the mysteries Yap teases entice—and, in the spirit of series starters, don’t all get resolved. Powering the novel, though, is the potent central dilemma of power and how to use it, as Gina finds magic doesn’t relieve her from real-world consequences.

Takeaway: A young girl, touched with fae magic, must protect her family from abuse.

Comparable Titles: Jodi Taylor’s The Nothing Girl, Kyrie McCauley’s If These Wings Can Fly.

Production grades
Cover: A
Design and typography: A
Illustrations: N/A
Editing: B
Marketing copy: B

Formats
Paperback Book Details
  • 10/2023
  • 9781639888481 B0CLQNX1BQ
  • 252 pages
  • $15.99
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