"A stunning debut, as beautiful as it is bold. Cobell has woven an aching examination of grief in an Indigenous community with a thriller brimming with so many secrets and twists, it’ll leave you breathless." — Diana Urban, award-winning author of All Your Twisted Secrets
"A gripping debut thriller with dynamic characters who leap off the page and demand to be heard." — Jessica Goodman, New York Times bestselling author of The Counselors and The Legacies
"With a complex and beautifully drawn cast of characters and a world that comes to life in vivid color, Looking for Smoke will draw you deep into a mystery that's steeped in grief and shrouded in secrets. This is a story that moves with the relentless beat of the drums, and its echoes reverberate long after you've read the final page." — Ginny Myers Sain, New York Times bestselling author of Dark and Shallow Lies
"An absolute thrilling mystery, that's beautifully told! Looking For Smoke completely blew me away." — Nick Brooks, author of Promise Boys
"Looking for Smoke opens a heartbreaking window onto the ongoing plague of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women and Girls, exploring its real world costs. These unforgettable young characters give voice to this ever-growing trauma. Their stories will leave you with a richer understanding of what it means just to survive, as a young Indigenous person today.” — Eric Gansworth, author of Printz Honor Book Apple (Skin to the Core)
"A breathtaking debut thriller filled with raw emotions, life-like characters, and a vivid setting that centers on the all-too-real epidemic of Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women. KA Cobell is a talent to watch, and I can't wait to see what she does next." — Liz Lawson, New York Times bestselling author of the Agathas series and The Lucky Ones
"Via four alternating POVs informed by the intricacies of reservation life, Cobell highlights the Missing and Murdered Indigenous Women crisis and delivers a gut-punch of an ending in this timely debut thriller that is by turns spine-tingling and emotionally raw." — Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Cobell takes an already solid thriller and raises the stakes by setting it on a Blackfeet Nation reservation, shining light upon the problems that plague many Native American communities, including drug use, domestic abuse, and poverty. Every character has had their lives impacted by one or more of these, and the struggle against these pervasive issues drags them down like an inexorable tide. The result is a story that is gritty and tense but also showcases the deep-rooted strength Native American communities have to summon hope in challenging times." — Booklist
"A worthy read for sleuthy, detail-oriented teens. All the hallmarks of a page-turning thriller are here, with unreliable alibis aplenty and clues interspersed at a compelling pace, as well as a final, satisfying showdown with a twist that’s the perfect culmination of the quest for justice." — Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
"Intense and gripping...Looking for Smoke movingly brings attention toand demands awareness and justice forstolen Indigenous girls." STARRED REVIEW. — Shelf Awareness
06/01/2024
Gr 9 Up—Cobell's debut thriller addresses injustice and homicide within the Montana Blackfeet community. Teenager Rayanne Arnoux has been missing for months, and when her friend Samantha White Tail is murdered at the North American Indian Days festival, fears mount that the two incidents are somehow connected. The story cycles among the four teens (Mara, Loren, Eli, and Brody) who last saw Samantha alive as they come under police scrutiny. Mara, ostracized for returning to reservation life after years spent away, worries that her fights with Samantha and Rayanne will make her a suspect. Loren aggressively searches for answers in the wake of having lost both her sister and her friend. Eli is stigmatized and shunned due to his father's meth addiction, but he is devoted to protecting and raising his younger sister. And Brody's loyalty to his older brother, while an admirable family bond, often works against the group's quest to gather information. The book shines in its character development; there are a lot of initial details to sort through, but each narrator comes into their own after the festival. The thriller elements are more slow-burn than explosive, but Cobell's focus on missing and murdered Indigenous women raises awareness of the grim statistics present in Native American communities. There is some drug and alcohol use, and most characters are members of the Blackfeet Nation. VERDICT Mystery veterans will find familiar tropes leading to the reveal, but the windows into contemporary Native American culture make this a compelling read. Recommended.—Michael Van Wambeke
An ensemble of narrators delves into this audiobook in which a Blackfeet girl's murder is tied to four teens. Loren, whose sister went missing months ago, is voiced by Katie Anvil Rich. Mara, voiced by Julie Lumsden, is new to the reservation. Brody, voiced by Shaun Taylor-Corbett, is a jokester with a crush. And Eli, voiced by Jordan Waunch, is full of secrets and spends a lot of time caring for his young sister. Each narrator delivers a teen's point of view; occasionally they come together as a cast to voice radio interviews. While the intensifying pace suits the genre, not every narrator delivers on the story's emotional content. The narrators don't agree on how to voice the characters they aren't in charge of, and noticeable vocal edits break the listener's immersion in the story. A.K.R. © AudioFile 2024, Portland, Maine