Night of the Dragon (Shadow of the Fox #3) by Julie Kagawa #wyrdandwonder

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IMAGE CREDITS: Flaming phoenix by Sujono Sujono | Decorative phoenix by Tanantachai Sirival

NightoftheNight of the Dragon is one of the books I was reading as part of Wyrd and Wonder’s month long celebration of fantasy – (details here).  My review is below and the TL:DR is: this is a great series.  Fun, epic, packed with creativity, creatures of myth and legend and characters trying to save the world against the odds.

Night of the Dragon is the concluding episode in the Shadow of the Fox series by Julie Kagawa and brings to an end a highly entertaining, well written and completely absorbing story.  Ahh, that bittersweet feeling when a series you’ve enjoyed comes to an end but what a spectacular ending this was and one of the most enjoyable YA series that I’ve read for a long time.

So, this is the final leg of Yumeko and her companions’ quest and in true fantasy fashion things get real.  This is packed with drama, there is a much bigger picture going on here than is immediately apparent and the twists and turns at the end are almost none stop.

I’m not going to go into the plot too deeply.  Suffice to say this is a desperate race by a ragtag and unlikely bunch of characters trying to save the world from the demon hoards that concludes in a dramatic finale on the stormy cliffs of Iwagoto.  Did I mention a dragon?  There may be a dragon.

What works so well for me with this series is a combination of things.

Firstly, the relationships and characters are excellent.  You can’t help but form attachments to them and really care, you read the fight scenes with your heart in your throat and I’m not going to try and pull the wool over your eyes, Kagawa is pretty ruthless, so prepare yourselves, stock up on tissues and get ready to be gutted.  Some of these chapters will hit you hard but the author doesn’t give you a moment’s respite – straight onto the next scene – and I say ‘scene’ because this book is like a movie playing inside your brain.  It’s so cinematic and easy to visualise.  Please, somebody, anybody, the God of Anime – lets do this thing.  This series would be so good if adapted (if adapted well that is).  It’s chock full of fantasy goodness.  Ghosts, dragons, demons and a young and innocent girl who also happens to be a fox.

Secondly, the writing.  Not going to lie, sometimes I find YA a little too skimpy, I end up reading but having questions that remain unanswered and whilst I understand that not every reader wants overly fine detail it can be a difficult balance to strike.  Here’s it’s done well, there’s enough information to see the place and know the characters, to understand the places they’re travelling through and the adversaries they’re coming up against without feeling cumbersome or over wordy to the extent that the tension and plot suffer.

Thirdly, here is a romance in a story that I can really appreciate.  No instalove – which I think deserves a big thank you simply on it’s own.  But, on top of that characters that are getting to know each other, there’s a slow burn of tension and chemistry and at the same time a light touch that prevents it becoming the key focus of everything.  It’s a background issue that you’re aware of, it builds gradually finding a footing in a natural way that doesn’t overshadow the rest of what’s taking place.

In a nutshell this has been such an enjoyable series.  An epic quest, a fascinating world and a coming of age tale of a young girl who wins hearts and minds.  Not to mention all the emotions. Oh, my heart with the final scene.  There could have been tears.

I have no hesitation in recommending this series.

Rating 5 stars

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

Can’t Wait Wednesday : It Will Just Be Us by Jo Kaplan #wyrdandwonder #Gothic #Haunting

 

W&WIMAGE CREDITS: Flaming phoenix by Sujono Sujono | Decorative phoenix by Tanantachai Sirival

“Waiting On Wednesday” is a weekly meme that was originally created by Breaking the Spine.  Unfortunately Breaking the Spine are no longer hosting so I’m now linking my posts up to Wishful Endings Can’t Wait Wednesday. Don’t forget to stop over, link up and check out what books everyone else is waiting for.  If you want to take part, basically, every Wednesday, we highlight a book that we’re really looking forward to.  For the month of May I will be joining up this event with Wyrd and Wonder and highlighting fantasy books.  This week my book is : It Will Just Be Us by Jo Kaplan: gothic, haunting, – oh hell yes, sign me up, immediately.  Here’s the description:

ItwillbejustusSam Wakefield’s ancestral home, a decaying mansion built on the edge of a swamp, isn’t a place for children. Its labyrinthine halls, built by her mad ancestors, are filled with echoes of the past: ghosts and memories knotted together as one. In the presence of phantoms, it’s all Sam can do to disentangle past from present in her daily life. But when her pregnant sister Elizabeth moves in after a fight with her husband, something in the house shifts. Already navigating her tumultuous relationship with Elizabeth, Sam is even more unsettled by the appearance of a new ghost: a faceless boy who commits disturbing acts—threatening animals, terrorizing other children, and following Sam into the depths of the house wielding a knife. When it becomes clear the boy is connected to a locked, forgotten room, one which is never entered, Sam realizes this ghost is not like the others. This boy brings doom. As Elizabeth’s due date approaches, Sam must unravel the mysteries of Wakefield before her sister brings new life into a house marked by death. But as the faceless boy grows stronger, Sam will learn that some doors should stay closed—and some secrets are safer locked away forever.

Expected publication : August 2020Can't Wait Wednesday

Top Ten Tuesday : The Purge #wyrdandwonder

 

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IMAGE CREDITS: Flaming phoenix by Sujono Sujono | Decorative phoenix by Tanantachai Sirival

tttTop Ten Tuesday is a weekly meme where every Tuesday we look at a particular topic for discussion and use various (or more to the point ten) bookish examples to demonstrate that particular topic.  Top Ten Tuesday (created and hosted by  The Broke and Bookish) is now being hosted by That Artsy Reader Girl and future week’s topics can be found here.  This week’s topic is :

The Last Ten Books I Abandoned set aside – for now

I’m teaming my post up this week with Wyrd and Wonder (details here) and so I’ve chosen fantasy books for this week’s theme.

This is s sad post.  I don’t like to abandon books – it sounds so harsh doesn’t it.  Let’s not say ‘abandon’, lets say ‘set aside’ – at the end of the day you just never know do you.  Here are ten books that I’ve come to the conclusion I probably won’t read, they’re all books I’ve bought some time ago and really wanted but that gnawing urge has, for now, diminished.  Let me be clear – no books were harmed in the making of this post, they’re all still sitting pretty and, lets be honest, i’ll probably never let them go (insert mad cackle) but, I recognise that I probably won’t read them at this point – unless someone absolutely tells me I HAVE TO:

  1. Some Kind of Fairy Tale by Graham Joyce
  2. The Language of Flowers by Vanessa Diffenbaugh
  3. The Adamantine Palace  by Stephen Deas
  4. The Shambling Guide to New York City by Mur Lafferty
  5. The First Fifteen Lives of Harry August by Claire North
  6. Jinn and Juice by Nicole Peeler
  7. The Sin Eater’s Daughter by Melinda Salisbury
  8. Written in Red by Anne Bishop
  9. The Ballad of Black Tom by Victor LaValle
  10. Radiance by Grace Draven

So, which one do you think I absolutely have to read??

The Girl and the Stars (Book of the Ice #1) by Mark Lawrence

The Girl and the Stars is the first Book of the Ice and a great start to series.  In true Lawrence fashion it has incredible world building and I suspect, as with the rest of his books, is going to be something that has the ‘big picture’ in mind.

This is Abeth, the cold and the wind make for very uncomfortable living.  Life on the ice is tough and life expectancy short for most and for those who are different, well, it’s really short.  The tribes who live in these extremes can’t afford difference, they have to be tough, fast and resilient and for those who can’t fit in the prospects are harsh.

When we meet Yaz, she is travelling across the ice with her family.  It is time for another meeting of the tribes and for the frightening initiation ritual that the children must face.  Yaz is afraid.  She knows she’s different and that this difference will lead to her being discarded and thrown into the bottomless pit where all outcasts end their days known as the ‘Broken’.  And, this is when the story takes us, down into a dark pit.

I’m not going to elaborate on the plot, there are plenty of reviews that already do so very well and so it’s unnecessary.  I would mention that if you’ve not read anything by Lawrence before, although this is set in the same cold world as the Book of the Ancestor series, it isn’t necessary to have read his previous books in order to pick this one up, although clearly there will be certain references that you may not pick up, but you won’t know that you’re not picking them up, so it’s all good. After all, if you’ve never eaten chocolate you don’t know that you’re missing out – but, wait, what? Why wouldn’t you eat chocolate!

I’m always excited to pick up a new Lawrence book, I can genuinely say that I’ve enjoyed everything of his that I’ve read so far and the expectation of reading a book set on the Ice – which is where a character that I particularly enjoyed from the previous series comes from – well, if anticipation could be measured you still wouldn’t be able to measure mine. And, this gets off to a great start.  I loved the opening chapters.  They delivered so much.  I found myself, in short order, really liking Yaz and at the same time being very worried about what she was expecting to face.  The reckoning that Yaz and her family are racing towards is no small threat and the tension that was evident in everyone came across so well.  Like they were holding their breath, muscles tense, just waiting for everything to be over so they could breath out again and release those bunched up shoulders.  And then the worst happens, it’s not a spoiler to mention here that Yaz ends up in the very place that she most dreads – but, what I will say, is that the way she came to be there was very much a surprise and also, once she is inside her own worst nightmare, It’s completely different than she expected.

The world building in TGatS is fantastic.  The Pit of the Missing is deep.  So deep that it seems to contain at least another world completely.  Imagine an ice age, everything you know has been consumed, the ice has enveloped it and continued to grow.  The survivors eek out an existence on the surface with little awareness of the history beneath their feet. Everything here speaks of an apocalypse, perhaps this is a future-earth and the worst has happened, the world being consumed in a dark age where few survived – I don’t know, I’m simply throwing random conjectures around to see if anything will stick.  What I do know is that this is the same world as the Book of the Ancestor, although I’m not sure if events here take place before or after that series.  I’m sure all will become clear eventually (did I mention ML and his long game?)  Anyway, there are certain elements to the story that were familiar such as mention of Gerants (giants) and also the strange abilities and (river of) magic that Yaz is able to tap into.

So, Yaz.  She’s an intriguing character to read.  Her life has been mapped out before her, expectations of her future partner already planned, and yet, at the back of her mind she knows she doesn’t fit it and there’s the dilemma of desperately not wanting to be found to be different whilst at the same time yearning for something different from life than that which is planned.  She loves her family and in fact this is what drives the plot and also gives her a desperate, running around like a headless chicken vibe at certain points, plus, she’s a young girl of little experience and sometimes that is very clear.  But, even with her youth and naivety Yaz has inner strength and a certain gravitas and her emergence in the pit causes a stir and is probably a catalyst for events.

A different and dark world exists under the ice, think Journey to the Centre of the Earth meets Lord of the Flies and you might be onto something.  Again, I don’t think it’s a spoiler to mention that a lot of the children thrown into the pit survive.  Yaz survived after all so why shouldn’t others, and this is a strange community of children who have lived with horrors.  It’s also a brutal world of dog eats dog and apart from the bickering and jousting for position that exists there are other threats from the Tainted and from Hunters from the underground city.  Yaz could definitely be a leader here, she immediately gains the confidence and trust of others but she has her own mission and this comes first and foremost.

In terms of other characters, I didn’t really form an attachment to any at this point, they’re interesting to read but the story here takes place over a very short time span – I think maybe four or five days?  It was difficult for the characters themselves to develop strong feelings towards each other during that time so it’s only natural that I would feel similarly.  As it happens, I would very much have liked to spend more time under the ice and would have enjoyed this part of the story taking time to develop a little more slowly, but, and here I’m about to turn into Jekyll and Hyde, I can also see why the story had this breakneck pace.  There’s an urgency to the plot that really drives the pace plus a twist that once revealed makes the need for swift action a necessity.

As with all my reviews for ML this is becoming ridiculously wordy and yet I feel I’ve barely scratched the surface of what I want to say.  So I’m going to round things up.

This is an excellent start to series, the writing is simply superb and the crafting of a dark and claustrophobic world filled with unusual stars is absolutely excellent.  I look forward to seeing what’s next in store for Yaz.

My rating 4 of 5 stars.

I received a copy through Netgalley, courtesy of the publisher, for which my thanks.  The above is my own opinion.

 

The Goblin Emperor by Katherine Addison : readalong, week 1 #wyrdandwonder, #TheGoblinEmperor

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Today is the first week in the readalong for the Goblin Emperor.  This is part of the Wyrd and Wonder event taking place during the month of May.  The details of Wyrd and Wonder are here and the readalong details are here.  There’s still plenty of time to jump in with this if you’ve been longing to read this book and want to jump aboard, or feel free to join in the discussion in the comments.  As always, beware of spoilers which will be lurking.

Here’s the reading schedule at a glance:

  • Week 1: Wednesday 6th May, Chapters 1 through 9
  • Week 2: Wednesday 13th May, Chapters 10 through 17 (end of part 2)
  • Week 3: Wednesday 20th May, Chapters 18 through 26 (part 3)
  • Week 4: Wednesday 27th May, Chapters 27 to End (part 4 & 5)

Lisa at DeerGeekPlace is hosting the readalong .  The questions will be posted weekly in  a Goodreads group page, and will also be tweeted out weekly from the @wyrdandwonder account using the hashtag #TheGoblinEmperor, as well as the standard #wyrdandwonder tag.  so without further ado – to the q&a and don’t spare the horses:

1. The first thing that struck me about this book is the formality in the way the characters speak. What do you think of this style? Do you enjoy it?

I do enjoy it.  It makes me feel transported to a different time and place and although sometimes such techniques can slow the pace down at the beginning, while you come to grips with things, I’m not finding that to be the case here.  Although, I’m fairly certain I’m probably mispronouncing all the names in my head when I’m reading. Strangely enough, I thought I’d bought this on audio, which is great for helping you to figure out place and people names, but when I came to look at it that wasn’t the case – I’ve bought for kindle.  My memory is clearly a leaky cauldron.

The reader, much like Maia in his newfound role, is given very little time to get comfortable before being thrown in at the deep end. How do you feel about this approach to the story? Does it help you to empathise with the newly ascended Emperor?

I really like that the story gets off to a running start.  There is literally no period of holding hands, we’re thrown straight in along with Maia and in fact that seems to be another cunning plan by the author, that we’re picking everything up at the same time as he does.  The writing really helps with this though and I have to salute Addison because she is incredibly capable (so far at least) in providing backstory in a quick and none-info-dump fashion.  I’m really enjoying the voyage of discovery that Maia’s path has taken and it’s a really subtle way of introducing characters, politics and history without actually turning into a tedious lesson. I think I’m going to really like Maia too. Already, and in spite of never having aspirations or expectations of becoming Emperor, he is putting his own stamp on things – in a refreshingly ‘human’ and sympathetic way.  Very well demonstrated, for example, by his simple desire to change to a different Emperor name that isn’t synonymous with harsh rule.

Too many cooks spoil the political broth, or so it seems. Are there any characters in particular who stand out to you as being the most potentially troublesome? And on the other hand, who catches your attention as being unusually (potentially) helpful?

Now, this question is where my lack of note taking so far d is proving to be a big mistake!  Anyway, I’ve gone back to check the names of some of the people who stand out so far, and these are in order of introduction and I haven’t included everyone.

Maia.  In a court of elves the half goblin child of the Emperor is definitely not the favoured child.  It seems that the Emperor never favoured the marriage with Maia’s mother and exiled him as soon as possible.  Maia has been taught some court etiquette by his cousin but to be clear he was never expected to be Emperor and he is ill prepared for the role in many respects.  But, Maia shows a real strength of character so far.  He has taken up the role as best he can and is in fact putting his own stamp on things, not least of all making it clear that he won’t be a puppet for someone else to rule through.  I love his ‘innocence’ – possibly not the best description but it kind of fits – and the way he takes enjoyment from simple things – and then feels guilty about it.

Setheris – Maia’s cousin.  Let’s just say I’m not loving him so far, but it is early days so perhaps he will redeem himself.  It seems that when Maia was exiled to Edonomee his cousin Setheris was sent with him and the relationship between the two was not exactly pleasant.  This could be seen as slightly at odds with Setheris giving Maia advice on what to do first, after discovering that he was to become Emperor following the tragedy that killed his father and brothers – that could be seen as good advice that he didn’t have to offer but, it could also be twisted into something more self serving which only time will tell.  If Maia is to become Emperor, Setheris may be thinking of how this rise in status can benefit himself?

Chavar, Lord Chancellor of Maia’s father.  We hear a lot about him before making his acquaintance and none of it seems favourable.  Clearly he’s an ambitious character and being LC to the previous Emperor you can only assume that he shares the dislike and prejudice towards Maia that Maia’s own father demonstrated.  Of course, he’s not a foolish man and he’s not going to throw himself under the bus so it will be interesting to see how his character develops.  I’m not inclined to like him so far, he’s too keen on power by the sound of things but, again, time will tell.

Csevet – one of the first people who Maia meets upon arrival at court.  He seems very helpful and keen to please and soon becomes quite necessary in organising the household and also imparting information to Maia.  I like Csevet, he seems to be young and energetic and keen to please – I hope he’s not a spy in the camp.

Hesero – Setheris’s wife.  She’s only appeared once in the story so far but what was abundantly clear was that Setheris seemed determined and maybe even anxious for her to meet Maia.  I think she’s going to be an interesting character to keep an eye on and Setheris is clearly eager to inveigle her into court.  Plus, her first meeting with Maia was very interesting.  He was totally gobsmacked wasn’t he!  She seems to have some sort of power over him – like she’s charmed him or something.  She is clever and the phrase ‘behind every successful man is a woman’ springs to mind.  She seems to be the brains of the marriage.

The Nohecharei – two protectors of the Emperor who are never far from his side. Beshelar – a soldier and Cala, I’m not quite sure how to describe Cala – a wise man maybe?  Anyway, I like this pairing and think they are going to be really good additions to the story.  The disapproving, ramrod straight soldier with his disapproval and the slightly shambolic and always late and shabbily attired wiseman who comes across as caring and thoughtful – both clearly disapproving of the other.

Csoru – the widow empress.  Desperately seeking power.  Sensible enough to know when to back down but the last chapter raised a very interesting point about a person at court known as a Witness for the Dead who seems to be here with her approval.

So the late emperor was killed deliberately, and now Chavar effectively has control of the investigation. I have to know: do you suspect him at all of being involved in the incident?

Well, he’s the immediate and obvious person to look at.  He seemed very keen to keep Maia at bay and keep power for himself.  Of course he could simply be looking out for the empire, trying to protect trade deals and tentative relationships and not expecting a teenage boy with little knowledge of such to be able to do so.  But, he comes across as very pushy and a little unlikable.  Plus, he’s very keen to become involved in the investigation.  Of course, you could argue that if he had anything to do with the incident he didn’t handle it as well as he could have by leaving things up in the air that could spoil everything – Maia in particular.  I’m still inclined to suspect him even though he is the most obvious choice.  The widow empress it seems was also desperate for power and I think she’s a lot smarter than her ‘doll like’ appearance would suggest.  Basically I’m going to suspect everyone possible and change my mind with furious rapidity.

What are your other thoughts/feelings/first impressions?

So far so good.  I think.  There’s a lot to consider here.  Political machinations, murder investigations, a potential marriage and lots of positioning by the people at court.  I like the main character and think he’s going to be somebody I can really get on board with.  It will be very interesting to see how the other characters pan out and discover if there are any snakes in the grass.  This is going to be my type of read with subtlety and intrigue aplenty.  Finally – ‘Moon-witted hobgoblin’ – I’m going to keep that one.

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IMAGE CREDITS: Flaming phoenix by Sujono Sujono | Decorative phoenix by Tanantachai Sirival

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