“Grief, severe anxiety, and an abundance of negative self-talk make for a narrator who is at odds with herself—and who’s missing a lot of what’s going on around her. . . . She is a protagonist who is simultaneously deeply frustrating and relatable, and by the end she’s at least able to paint herself more clearly. Heartbreakingly well executed.” — Kirkus Reviews
“Sixteen-year-old painter Ebony Jones . . . is struggling to figure out who she is. . . . Lyrical yet grounded prose by Tamani depicts Ebony’s emotional turmoil via a keen first-person POV, while interstitials featuring an omniscient narrator act as between-the-lines glimpses into Ebony’s psyche. Amid the emotional intensity, these unique moments of narrative interjection provide quiet spaces for reader contemplation regarding the things one hides from oneself and the ways in which self-discovery can inspire both fear and feelings of freedom.” — Publishers Weekly
“[Ebony Jones] is angry that her parents have decided to leave Houston for tiny, rural Alula Lake . . . Ebony's anger feeds on her reckless behavior and consumes her until she reaches a breaking point that puts her on the path to clarity. . . . Refreshingly realistic and thoughtfully drawn.” — Booklist