NEEDY LITTLE THINGS by Channelle Desamours
I am an affiliate of Bookshop.org and Libro.fm, online retailers that support independent booksellers. If you make a purchase by clicking through the links in this post, I will receive a commission. For more information, see my “About” page.
I received an Advance Reader Copy of this book from the publisher in order to write this review.
The publisher’s summary
In this debut speculative YA mystery, a Black teen with premonition-like powers must solve her friend’s disappearance before she finds herself in the same danger, perfect for fans of Ace of Spades.
Sariyah Lee Bryant can hear what people need—tangible things, like a pencil, a hair tie, a phone charger—an ability only her family and her best friend, Malcolm, know the truth about. But when she fulfills a need for her friend Deja who vanishes shortly after, Sariyah is left wondering if her ability is more curse than gift. This isn’t the first time one of her friends has landed on the missing persons list, and she’s determined not to let her become yet another forgotten Black girl.
Not trusting the police and media to do enough on their own, Sariyah and her friends work together to figure out what led to Deja’s disappearance. When Sariyah’s mother loses her job and her little brother faces complications with his sickle cell disease, managing her time, money, and emotions seems impossible. Desperate, Sariyah decides to hustle her need-sensing ability for cash—a choice that may not only lead her to Deja, but put her in the same danger Deja found herself in.
My recommendation
There are many things to love about this debut, from the clean writing to the candid teenage voice to the meticulously crafted mystery that includes plenty of misdirection and red herrings to set you spinning (delightedly) down the wrong path. Perhaps my favorite, however, was the way Desamours handles Sariyah’s magical ability and its link to her ADHD. It always makes me nervous when an author combines disability with magic, but what I love about this novel are the ways that both magic and disability play a significant role in the main character’s identity but an insignificant role in the character’s ability to solve the mystery. Her ability to hear everyone’s needs impacts how she approaches certain problems, but never in a contrived or deus ex machina way. Nor do her magic powers compensate for or cure her disability–quite the opposite. Add a nuanced depiction of mental illness and representation of sickle cell disease, and this disabled librarian can’t help but swoon. Congratulations to Channelle on this thrilling debut! I can’t wait to read her future works.
