Jump to ratings and reviews
Rate this book

Zia Erases the World

Rate this book
"Luminous, empowering, and full of heart-healing truths, this is a novel that belongs on every shelf." — Katherine Applegate, Newbery Award winning author

For fans of Crenshaw and When You Trap a Tiger comes the extraordinary tale of a headstrong girl and the magical dictionary she hopes will explain the complicated feelings she can't find the right words for—or erase them altogether.

Zia remembers the exact night the Shadoom arrived. One moment she was laughing with her best friends, and the next a dark room of shadows had crept into her chest. Zia has always loved words, but she can’t find a real one for the fear growing inside her. How can you defeat something if you don’t know its name?

After Zia’s mom announces that her grouchy Greek yiayia is moving into their tiny apartment, the Shadoom seems here to stay. Until Zia discovers an old family the C. Scuro Dictionary, 13th Edition .

This is no ordinary dictionary. Hidden within its magical pages is a mysterious blue eraser shaped like an evil eye. When Zia starts to erase words that remind her of the Shadoom, they disappear one by one from the world around her. She finally has the confidence to befriend Alice, the new girl in sixth grade, and to perform at the Story Jamboree. But things quickly dissolve into chaos, as the words she erases turn out to be more vital than Zia knew.

In this raw, funny, and at times heartbreaking middle grade debut, Bree Barton reveals how—with the right kind of help—our darkest moments can nudge us toward the light.

256 pages, Hardcover

Published April 26, 2022

About the author

Bree Barton

8 books511 followers
Bree Barton lives in mythical Ithaca with her partner and two waggish dogs. She wrote her first book as “a humble child of ten”—her exact words in the query letter she sent to editors. Those editors told her to keep writing, and luckily, she did. Bree was eleven when her journey with the Shadoom began, and stories offered a special kind of balm. A handful of years later, she is the author of several young adult novels published in seven countries and four languages. Bree teaches dance and writing and loves connecting with readers of all ages. Zia Erases the World is her middle grade debut.

I N S T A G R A M: instagram.com/speakbreely
Y O U T U B E: youtube.com/breebarton

Ratings & Reviews

What do you think?
Rate this book

Friends & Following

Create a free account to discover what your friends think of this book!

Community Reviews

5 stars
100 (39%)
4 stars
102 (40%)
3 stars
43 (16%)
2 stars
6 (2%)
1 star
2 (<1%)
Displaying 1 - 30 of 68 reviews
Profile Image for Betsy.
Author 11 books3,105 followers
June 16, 2022
We had less words when I was a kid. It's true! When I was growing up the same concepts and ideas as today were all around, but so many of their terms were unknown to the general populace. I had a friend with OCD but we didn’t have a name for it. I had a friend who was certainly non-binary, but the idea of personal pronouns had entered few children’s lexicons. We had kids who were neurodivergent or suffered from anxiety and yet the terms we used for these conditions were so clunky and broad. I don’t know that we quite understood how important it would be to name things for what they were. Names have power. If you can name something, you can tackle it. And for so long our children have wrestled with the nameless. They’ve been on their own, maybe making up their own names when they couldn’t shove themselves into the already existing lexicon. I say all this, but it’s not like the kids born today are gifted every word out there instantly upon birth. They still need to find the words and the names that fit who they are inside. This is a concept that would be difficult to put into a novel for children in the first place, so what do you do? Perhaps you turn it into a fantastical narrative. A metaphor of sorts, that manages to balance the magical with the deadly serious. In Zia Erases the World author Bree Barton takes on that challenge. Her concept is small, even silly, when you hear it. But the implications? You may find yourself grasping for words to describe them.

How do you tackle something you can’t even name? For at least a year now, Zia has been dealing with something that she calls the Shadoom. It's not something she likes to think about. Fortunately, there’s plenty to distract her. She and her mom are currently moving her very Greek grandmother (her yiayia), into their tiny home, she’s avoiding her old friends at school, and she’s met a new girl who’s not only nice and cool but funny too. Still, on the outer edges of everything, Zia knows that the Shadoom is just waiting to pounce. Words are Zia’s thing, so she buries herself in them a lot. Maybe that’s why she’s so drawn to a mysterious old book in her yiayia’s attic called the C. Scuro Dictionary, 13th Edition. Turns out, when Zia uses the eraser tucked inside on the book, she can literally erase any word, and its reality, out of existence. If you could get rid of any word, what would you erase? And what would you do if the one thing you’re trying to get rid of didn't seem to have a name?

I read a lot of contemporary middle grade graphic novels to my daughter. She’s just about the perfect age for Zia too, and sometimes I wonder how her reading experience would compare to my own at her age. For example, if I read her a book and a character is counting and tapping things a lot, she’ll look at me and say without hesitation, “OCD”. If someone is missing the signs that a friend or family member may be suffering from depression, she’ll call that out instantly. Would she be able to identify that the Shadoom in “Zia” is really anxiety and depression? Would other kids? Maybe some, but there is a distinct possibility that there are kids out there who have never even heard of these concepts before. Looking at the cover of this book, it resembles nothing so much as a light-hearted fantasy novel. So perhaps some fantasy enthusiast will pick it up, read it, and come to realize that this book is naming their own Shadoom as well. When you’re an author writing about serious subjects, you can’t rule out the possibility that some kid is going to see themselves in your book. I once heard someone, I think it was the author Ann M. Martin, say that because some kids write to her about their very serious issues in their lives and at home, she would hire a therapist to help her craft the correct responses to some of the cries for help they’d send to her. That may yet happen to Ms. Barton. After all, books can be mirrors, even when the person who picks them up is expecting a window.

I worry that when I talk in this review about something like Barton’s take on naming your pain, I’m making the book sound a lot more serious and dour than it actually is. The fact of the matter is that this light-hearted book jacket isn’t really all that misleading. Written in the first person, so much of the story hinges on Zia’s voice. And many is the middle grade novel I’ve put down (and kids as well, I guarantee you) when the main character's voice doesn’t work. With Zia, I was particularly wary. After all, this is a kid that smashes together words on a regular basis to make her own original combinations. That's the kind of thing that could go real twee, real quick. Instead, Barton pulls it off. Zia’s new words aren’t cute but they have their own inherent charm. You like Zia. Even when she’s doing things that are clearly wrongheaded, you might be mentally screaming at her but you’re still rooting for her all the way. Flawed heroines are tricky creatures to conjure to life, but this book pulls it off. You’d want Zia to be your friend. You’d just also have to acknowledge that that kind of friendship isn’t, what you’d call, easy.

Big concepts necessitate a smaller focus. If you’re not writing an epic fantasy novel of 500+ some pages, then you have to keep things simple. This is both a good and a bad thing. Good for the writer, since they don’t really have to broaden their focus much outside of their protagonists’ firsthand experiences. Bad, because anytime you attempt to take their concept to the logical next step the whole idea falls apart. Zia suffers from this conundrum a little. In this book a girl is capable of erasing the very concept behind a word out of existence. In doing so, she gets rid of some pretty huge ones, like “pain”. Now if, in fact, all pain were to cease in the world at once, the effects would be immediate, worldwide, and even if humanity itself couldn’t remember ever having felt pain, there’s be a general societal collapse in some way, yes? In this book, though, all the effects are local and, quite frankly, relatively small. Barton protects the reader from the darker implications, but that focus I talked about? It just zeroes in on Zia, her experiences, her friends and family, and that is it. At no point in this book does she ever see a news article related to her actions. And you understand completely how and why Barton made this choice. Just be aware that when you hand this book to a literal-minded reader, they’re gonna come back to you with some questions.

I’ll be frank with you when I say that I have no idea how one would go about writing a book like Zia. To get a book like this right, it has to read like a piece of well-oiled machinery. It needs to be able to balance out what seems like a fluffy magical concept alongside generational trauma and contemporary takes on personal mental health issues. When I sit back and think about the kids it could help, it sort of blows my tiny mind. It falls into that category of fantasy that cuddles right up to realistic fiction. Do we have a word for that kind of a book? I betcha Zia would. I betcha she’d also adore this book, if she happened to find it crammed in a corner of her grandmother’s attic. Fun and heart wrenching by turns, this book never flounders when trying to find the right words. We should all be so lucky.
Profile Image for Jeremy.
1,124 reviews55 followers
October 26, 2022
I don't encounter a lot of middle grade novels that deal with generational trauma and clinical depression (or as Zia calls it at first, "The Shadoom"), so that alone makes "Zia Erases the World" stand out to me. However it's also an imaginative work of speculative fiction that deftly balances heavy topics with humour and wordplay.

The premise is: A tween girl discovers a magic dictionary in her grandmother's attic, that allows her to erase words from existence. At first she thinks she's helping people by erasing words like "pain" and "fear", but eventually the consequences of erasing these words spin out of her control, and she starts to realize how necessary all feelings are to the human experience.

Pretty good stuff, and the perfect recommendation for a sensitive, bright young reader who keeps their feelings bottled up inside.
Profile Image for yağmur.
95 reviews296 followers
January 25, 2024
artık 26 yaşımda elimden tutan kitaplar diye bir liste yapacağım. zia’da listeden bize el sallayacak. bazı cümleleri nasıl kurdunuz siz bu çocuk kitabında ya! vicdansızlıktır! (ama nefistir de.) gölgoda’sı olan herkese tavsiyemdir.
Profile Image for Victoria Moschou.
Author 4 books80 followers
April 12, 2022
Another magnificent, heartwarming book from the QUEEN of fantasy, Bree Barton.

Zia Erases the World is a MG novel that everyone out there, ages 9+, should read. It talks about mental health, that terror inside when anxiety strikes and how, despite our darkest moments, we can still find the light coming into our lives through the cracks our wounds have left.

I laughed, cried and connected with all of the characters in this beauty, especially since there's Greek representation in it.

I highly suggest you read Bree Barton's debut MG novel, as it'll take you to infinity and beyond! And it'll help you deal with some of your own dark moments.
Profile Image for Sena Nur Işık.
Author 9 books1,090 followers
February 16, 2024
✨10/10✨

Zia, anneannesinin evinin çatı katında bulduğu sözlükteki kelimeleri sildiğinde o kelimelerin hayatından çıktığını fark ettiğinde hayatını kötü etkileyen kelimeleri tek tek siliyor. Hüzün, korku, şeftali, iş vb. kelimeleri sildiğinde daha mutlu bir hayatı olacağına inanıyor ama dünyanın dengesi bozulmaya başladığında yanlış bir şeyler yaptığını anlıyor.

Kurgu, olay örgüsü ve karakterler mükemmeldi. Hem Zia’yı hem de Alice’i çok sevdim. Kitabın fikrine ve verdiği mesajlara bayıldım. Son sayfalarda ağladım. Fantastik ve bilim kurgu okumak isteyen +11 yaş gençlere kesinlikle tavsiye ederim.
Profile Image for Ömer.
Author 22 books283 followers
March 21, 2024
Çocuklar ve gençlerde zorlu duygulara dair çooook güzel bir kitaptı. Etrafınızdaki gençlere, ergenlere okutmalısınız bence. Yazar da benzer şeyler yaşadığı için çok iyi aktarabilmiş.
Profile Image for Christopher.
Author 9 books27 followers
February 17, 2022
I had the ENORMOUS pleasure of reading an advance copy of this book, which means that my life got to be enriched by it a few months before the rest of you get to share the pleasure. THIS IS AN AMAZING BEAUTIFUL CARING THOUGHTFUL FUN BOOK, a book that hearkens back to all my favorite middle-grade adventure stories (From the Mixed-Up Files of Mrs. Basil E. Frankweiler, Wrinkle In Time, etc.):

When the logophilic Zia discovers a magical dictionary, she learns that words can very literally change her world -- and she sets about making it better. Of course, things do not go as planned -- especially since the thing that she most wants to improve is something she isn't able to put into words: her depression.

Yes, this is a book about mental health (operative word: HEALTH), but even more than that, it is a caring, loving romp through a cast of characters who are all rich with complexity. This is a book about a girl who learns to articulate her feelings -- and it is also unspeakably fun to read. It belongs on every single bookshelf.
Profile Image for Becky.
5,805 reviews260 followers
May 21, 2022
Premise/plot: Zia, our young heroine, discovers that she has the power (with a little help from a magical eraser and a magical dictionary) to change the world. But are her changes for the better or for the worse? Does erasing a word and all its meanings (definitions) ultimately helpful and healing to her anxiety? Or are words themselves part of the solution to what troubles her?

Zia struggles with 'the Shadoom.' It is her word for the shadow-y doom-y haunting weightiness of the anxiety that she's dealt with (mostly on her own, but sometimes with a little bit of reaching out for support) for the past year.

Quite a bit is going on in her life--at school and at home--and the Shadoom seems to be a little out of control. Will finding this magical dictionary be the solution she so desperately craves?

My thoughts: I wanted to love, love, love this one. I didn't quite love it. But I did really enjoy aspects of it. I'm not sure that magic realism is my cup of tea. I want to be clear that it isn't so much a problem with the book itself as I don't happen to enjoy magic realism. I like realistic fiction. I like fantasy. I don't necessarily like them together.

My absolute favorite quote:

Maybe it’s weird that an old dusty book of words gives me comfort. But words aren’t mean. They don’t make you feel small or broken. And if someone else does, you can look up small and broken in the dictionary and find them in permanent ink, proving someone else felt those things, too. Probably lots of someones. Who wouldn’t be comforted by that?
Profile Image for Bethanne.
31 reviews3 followers
September 22, 2022
A very interesting story! A coworker mentioned it and we had a decently long conversation about what words we would choose to erase, and what the potential impact would be. I love approachable JFIC stories about mental health issues - where the author doesn't beat you over the head, but gently incorporates it into the character's lives in such a way that the reader can relate when they are dealing with similar issues. I also appreciated that the author was able to touch on how someone can go about their daily life and "seem fine" but be battling horrible demons inside - even stopping them from doing what they love, or distancing them from their friends.



At times, I thought the author was trying a little too hard to be relatable to young readers through her vocabulary choices, like a "cool parent" trying to be hip with their kid's friends. In all, a fast, enjoyable read, and a concept that I have yet to read about!
Profile Image for Kim.
742 reviews23 followers
March 6, 2022
This is a fabulous book. I was not sure what to expect, but I found there to be just the right amount of magical realism to balance the true reality of depression and its affects on children and young adults. Zia is living a normal life until the night the Shadoom first visits; the Shadoom is a place where Zia gets lost in the reality and pressures of daily life. The Shadoom haunts her day and night, affecting her every thought. The Shadoom, Zia's word for the murky shadows of doubt and fear which follow her, is gaining strength until one day she pays a visit to her Greek grandmother's attic, Zia discovers a way to erase those fears which follow her when she finds a family heirloom: the C. Scuro Dictionary, 13th Edition. Slowly Zia begins to erases those fears which are within her. As Zia regains confidence and light in her life, she makes a new friend, and her life begins to feel a little more normal. However, once again the Shadoom begins to creep back and the shadows gain strength. Zia must face her fears, or risk erasing herself and all that is truly important to her.

This book is a gift to the world. In light of all these banned book discussions in our news today, I think it is even more relevant that young readers have a chance to find books to resonate to them for whatever reason - mostly to know they are not alone. Kids need the chance to see themselves somewhere in a book, and I truly hope that if some child needs it, they find this book.
Profile Image for Naz.
38 reviews4 followers
July 17, 2024
Zia içerisinden istemediği kelimeleri çıkarabildiği bir sözlüğe sahip olan ana karakterimiz. Sözlükten çıkarttığı kelimelerin hayatımızdan çıkıyor olması gibi ufak bir problem var sadece. Hüzün ve korku gibi hayatımızda olmadığında her şeyin daha iyi olacağını düşündüğümüz duyguların da aslında bugün olduğumuz insanın oluşmasında oldukça büyük bir öneme sahip olduğu mesajını veren bir kitap. Verdiği mesajı ve genel olarak karakterleri sevsem de tam olarak bende beklediğim etkiyi uyandırmadığı için bu puanı veriyorum. Tabii bir çocuk kitabı olduğunu da unutmamak gerek.
Profile Image for Laura I..
769 reviews34 followers
November 22, 2022
4.5 stars

This is a really fantastic, and at times very hard to read, depiction of depression. One of my students said that she liked it but “never wanted to pick it up” and I def get that. I cried a lot. It’s also charming and funny in moments though. Overall, I highly recommend it, but def expect to maybe feel very seen.
Profile Image for Danielle Wood.
1,254 reviews7 followers
October 25, 2022
I thought this was a great book. I loved how it addressed mental health in middle grade kids - things like anxiety and depression. I also really enjoyed all of the wordplay.
Profile Image for Melissa.
191 reviews38 followers
June 7, 2022
If anything is certain, it's that words are Bree Barton's superpower. This book is so incredible, so funny, so poignant, so warm. This should be in every person's library, no matter the age. The perfect window into what it's like to live with depression in all its shades and colors. I will be thinking about this book for a LONG time.
Profile Image for Jaymie.
659 reviews2 followers
December 29, 2022
Cute and unique! Good for upper elementary school age girls. Addressing depression, anxiety, friends, confidence. All the things that seem to turn us upside down at that age. It’s told in a cute way with cute characters. Zia uses a magic eraser in an old dictionary to take out the words that she doesn’t like. She learns along the comical & chaotic adventure that each word has its place. We can’t have the happy without the sad or the light without the dark. We need each other to make it. Equal parts funny & sad & sweet!
3.5 stars
Profile Image for Juli Anna.
2,891 reviews
October 4, 2022
I should disclose that this story perhaps hit a little close to home for me to be perfectly objective about it. I found the imaginative premise of a dictionary that helps its users change their realities quite captivating, and Zia and her family and friends (especially Alice) were engaging and relatable for me. This book does an excellent job of capturing the complicated nature of intergenerational emotional dysfunction, and Zia ultimately finds a supportive place from which to begin her healing. Unfortunately, I found Barton's writing--especially the pervasive wordplay--a bit gimmicky and I definitely spotted a few cliches here and there. On a more macro scale, the ending was both a little too pat (intergenerational dysfunction runs deep and doesn't usually get acknowledged and addressed so easily) and had glaring loose ends. I think this could be a really helpful book in the hands of the right reader, but the writing itself lacked the vigor I am always looking for.
Profile Image for Laura.
2,976 reviews88 followers
January 10, 2022
How does one write about depression for a middle grade audience, kids that are in 6-8th grade or so. There is depression in that age group, but it is largely not explored, because kids are good at making it look as though everything is fine.

The author does this by writing about Zia who has something she calls the shadoom, which is her room in herself that is dark and scary. She has always had to hide and bury her feelings, so that her mother will be happy, because her mother has enough on her mind.

But it makes life hard to have this sadness inside her, and when she discovers a magic dictionary, of her yaiyai’s that allows her to get rid of words, she decides she will remove words that cause her pain, such as the swimming pool, which she finds so humiliating to have to go in.

But of course, removing words from the language causes problems, because of course it would. Removing fear means that people don’t care. Removing pain means people dont’ know when they are injured.

Quick read, that I just had to finish, so I could find how this was all solved. Well written. Good voice for Zia, and good use of throwing Greek words in from her Yaiyai.

I like how three dimensional the characters are as well, and when someone is hurt they dont’ decide that they will never speak to that person again. And that bullies are bullies for a reason, and often it is because they have things that are hurting them.

Good book for children who think they might be alone in their depression, and having to bury their feelings so they won’t feel pain, but that stops tˍem from feeling joy as well.

This book is coming out in April of 2022.

Thanks to Edelweiss for making this book available for an honest review.

484 reviews
May 2, 2022
4.5. I could relate a lot to Zia and her battle with Shadoom. I so appreciate her voice and can relate to her attempts to rid the world of all that is dark but without the dark, there can be no light.
Profile Image for Alice Li.
16 reviews
June 24, 2024
It’s hard to believe I just finished another English book and finally enjoyed it a bit, instead of struggling with all the new vocabulary.

I chose this book because it was on a library reading list for 3rd-5th grade kids. And it’s a big shock for me, both in terms of the topic and the vocabulary. 3rd-5th grade kids are facing depression? And there are even therapy healing groups for young kids in the US! What a big shock for my limited knowledge!

Back to the book, I really appreciate the author’s imagination. The Chiaro Scuro dictionary, where you can erase the words you don’t want in your real life, and how after the erasure the world changes for the worse. It’s like watching “Black Mirror” but with a happy ending. However, as an adult, I have a problem with the happy ending. I know the mom can’t get rich in one day and decide to give her daughter and herself therapy. And the rich kids not getting attention from their parents is not an accident. It’s just how life is.

Although I’m really glad to see the book also shows the weaknesses of adults and normalizes that depression is not something you should be ashamed to talk about.
But still, as a book, I want a good ending. Or at least let me believe the happy ending is real. But this book lacks that. The whole idea is that if you speak out about your problem, it will go away. Well, IT’S NOT TRUE.
193 reviews3 followers
May 3, 2022
Sixth grader Zia is a word nerd. She loves words and is an expert at making up her own words if she can’t find a word that fits a specific situation. Zia’s world changes suddenly when the “Shadoom” descends upon her while at a friend’s birthday party. This feeling of darkness causes her to lose interest in spending time with her friends and leads her to opt to eat her lunch alone in a bathroom stall at school. Zia is hesitant to tell her already stressed and stretched mother about her feelings of sadness. When Zia’s grandmother moves in with Zia and her mom because of her worsening dementia, she brings with her a mysterious dictionary with a charmed eraser that allows the user to erase words. Initially Zia finds pleasure in erasing words like pain and fear from the dictionary, but she discovers that the removal of words results in some significant consequences. Zia needs to find a way to return the words to restore order to the world and to restore her own peace and happiness. This book does a beautiful job of addressing the challenging but important topics of depression and mental health in a way that will be accessible to a middle grade audience.
Profile Image for Kara Dunbar.
58 reviews2 followers
January 13, 2023
Peaches, pools, and pain. All these things and more bring out the Shadoom- a room of shadows inside of Zia. Luckily she’s found a magic dictionary with a magic eraser. It’s simple, erase the word and it disappears from the world. She starts erasing all the things that bring out the Shadoom, until unintended consequences start to make themselves apparent that is. This is the type of book I wish I had when I was younger. Bree Barton approaches middle school and mental illness with creative, delightful, and touching writing. The character of Zia is awkward, spunky, and fun. We see Zia walk through middle school with a single mom, not a lot of money, and a grandmother developing dementia. Not to mention the feelings she doesn’t have a name for- depression and anxiety. This book includes bullying and mentions of child and domestic abuse. It would be a great way to engage the conversation on mental illness and describing your emotions with kids and preteens. It is recommended for ages 8-13.
Profile Image for Arda Çakmak.
82 reviews
March 15, 2024
✨9/10✨

Zia kelimelerle hep iyi anlaşmış çok tatlı bir kız olsa da hem kendisine hem de sevdiklerinin karşılaştığı zorlukları görünce sözlükten bazı kelimeleri çıkarmaya karar veriyor. Bunun her şeyi düzelteceğini düşünüyor ama nasıl bir kaosa yol açtığının farkında değil maalesef. Korkuyu acıyı hüznü dünyadan silmek Zia'nın hayatını kolaylaştırmak yerine her şeyi karmaşık bir hale getiriyor...


Kitabın kurgusu anlatımı karakterleri mükemmeldi diyebilim. Sadece kitabın orta kısımlarında anlatım çok tekdüze gittiğinden birazcık sıkıldım ama kitabın sonlarına doğru gayet güzel bir şekilde toparlandığını söyleyebilirim. Zia karakterini çok sevdim arkadaşlarını çok sevdim ailesini çok sevdim ve gerçekten çok şanslı bir kız olduğunu da söyleyebilirim. Fantastik Bilimkurgu okumayı seven herkese şiddetle tavsiye ederim.

+11 yaş
Profile Image for Beth Clauss.
6 reviews1 follower
April 30, 2022
This book is such a gift to readers all ages. It touched me as an adult who has experienced my own periods of darkness or “the shadoom”, as Zia refers to it. The characters are so real and give voice to the fears so many people experience. It is also such a beautiful story that is magical, heart warming and enlightening.

My 13 year-old is reading the book now and we plan to suggest it to our mother-daughter book club. This is a great book for middle school age readers and can lead to important discussions about mental health.

Also, as a school social worker, I know this book will help so many youth that are struggling with depression to feel not so alone. And feeling not so alone in our pain is a first step towards healing.
49 reviews
October 17, 2023
As someone with depression/anxiety most of my life, this is the sort of book I wish I had growing up.

Zia Erases the World is all about naming the feeling inside you - this one being depression. It's balanced with a really entertaining plot, too, where she finds a way to erase words from the dictionary and as a result real life. It's interesting watching the repercussions of this play out in the world. Having depression and anxiety, especially when you don't know what it is, often leads to that feeling of just wanting to get rid of whatever's making you feel that way. Even though this is a girl-targeted book that definitely approaches the subject from a female perspective, it still resonated with me quite a lot.
Profile Image for Steph.
35 reviews3 followers
April 19, 2022
Thanks to Edelweiss+ for providing an eARC of this book.

Although it may seem odd, I thoroughly enjoyed this book about depression. This magical realism story has many more layers like middle school friendships, Greek heritage, and an enchanted dictionary! But at the heart of the story is Zia and her journey with depression. For most of the book, Zia doesn't even know what depression is. She calls it the "Shadoom." I'm not sure many kids at Zia's age would be able to explain what depression is.

For that reason, young readers need more stories just like Zia's to read about and connect too.
1,735 reviews4 followers
February 2, 2023
This book has such a good heart. Even as an adult, I saw myself in Zia's struggles with depression and her methods of healing. Alice is also a really important character, it's great for kids to know that they can and should expect that level of honesty and support from their loved ones. There were some plot points that I didn't think had clear enough logic (why wasn't Alice affected by the dictionary erasures, and why weren't Yiayia's erasures as powerful? The explanations weren't satisfying to me) but those pale compared to the quality of the story. I will definitely be recommending this one highly!
Profile Image for Mehmet.
98 reviews71 followers
February 16, 2024
Müthişti. Zia anksiyeteyle mücadele eden bir karakter ve içinde ‘Gölgoda’ adını verdiği anlam veremediği bir karanlıkla yaşıyor. Bir gün anneannesinin çatı katında bulduğu bir sözlükle hoşuna gitmeyen kelimeleri silebildiğini fark ediyor ve hayatı değişiyor. Ancak ‘korku’ gibi olmasa daha iyi olur diye düşündüğümüz kelimelerin bile hayatımızda çok önemli bir yeri var. Çünkü kötülük olmadan iyiliği anlayamayız. Bazı silinmiş kelimeleri başka insanlar hala kullanmaya devam ettiği için anlam hataları olan birkaç kısım vardı, onun haricinde kusursuz bir kitaptı. Her yaştan insan okuyabilir. Kesinlikle okusun da.
Profile Image for Great Books.
3,034 reviews60 followers
Read
May 2, 2022
One moment, 11-year-old Zia was at a friend's birthday. The next, the "shadoom" took over. At least, that's the best way word-nerd Zia can describe the dark feeling that has been creeping into her chest more and more often. Then her grandmother moves in with Zia and her mom, and Zia finds a mysterious dictionary with an eraser...and the power to get rid of the words that remind her of the "shadoom." However, it turns out that we need painful words more than we think we do, and chaos ensues.

Reviewer 22
Displaying 1 - 30 of 68 reviews

Can't find what you're looking for?

Get help and learn more about the design.