The Marigold Bridge, by Arien Skye, is a young adult paranormal fantasy with mystery, romance, and thriller elements woven through it. The story follows Araceli, a wealthy young woman in San Miguel de Allende, whose life collapses after her father is presumed dead and a dangerous family takes control of her home. As El Día de los Muertos opens the veil between the living and the dead, Araceli must use the spiritual gifts she has resisted to uncover the truth, protect her family, and decide what kind of person she wants to become.
What I appreciated most was how the book lets Araceli begin in a place that is not especially noble. She is spoiled, image-conscious, and used to comfort, but Skye does not flatten her into a cliché. Her fall from privilege is sharp and sometimes messy, but that mess is what makes her interesting. I liked watching her grief change her. Not magically. Not cleanly. It comes through anger, fear, pride, stubborn hope, and the slow realization that power is not the same thing as status.
The story really works when it leans into atmosphere and family. The marigolds, candles, food, perfume oils, ancestral voices, and festival scenes give the book a vivid texture without pulling it away from the plot. I also liked the author’s choice to make Araceli’s gift feel both sacred and inconvenient. The story is big and dramatic with villains who can feel almost operatic and plot turns that move fast. But for this genre, that heightened energy mostly works. It gives the book the feel of a supernatural telenovela mixed with a coming-of-age mystery, and I mean that as a compliment.
I would recommend The Marigold Bridge to readers who enjoy YA paranormal fantasy with strong family stakes, a touch of romance, and a heroine who has to be humbled before she can become brave. It will especially appeal to readers who like stories about ancestral magic, hidden corruption, revenge, and healing after loss. The book is emotional, stylish, and sincere, with enough suspense to keep the pages turning and enough heart to make Araceli’s journey matter.
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