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cyan_altaria's review against another edition
adventurous
mysterious
reflective
medium-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
5.0
This book is so good. Hark's character development was amazing. Quest was also such a good character. And the way the god's memory was still affecting people was just *chefs kiss*.
Graphic: Toxic friendship
Moderate: Addiction, Body horror, Violence, and Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Ableism, Slavery, and Kidnapping
Doestourneuse's review against another edition
adventurous
challenging
tense
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.25
This is a wonderful, brilliant concept. Compared to other books of FH’s that I’ve read, I found it extremely heavy.
Hark scavenges with his ‘friend’ Jelt. When a job goes wrong and he is caught, he ends up as an indentured servant to a curator in an institutional home for former priests of his archipelago’s since-departed gods, which presents an opportunity for a new life once his indenture is up. Jelt finds him and presses him to use his new position for more criminal activity - because as Hark puts it, if Jelt can’t have something, no one can. The boys’ discovery of a dangerous relic of the gods that might lead them to uncomfortable knowledge of their true nature puts them, and the whole archipelago, in danger. Hark will have to use all his resources and the help of Selphin, a rebel member of a local gang and the ‘sea-kissed’ (deaf) community, to save himself - that’s if he decides that he wants to go against his friend’s orders to do so.
I think FH is one of the most brilliant children’s authors I’ve ever read (I wish I could get books for adults this good), her writing style, characterisation and worldbuilding are flawless. But I found this quite unpleasant reading. From the outset, Jelt is an emotionally manipulative bully, and the drama hinges more on whether Hark will break away than it does on the main plot. I think it would be brilliant for a child who is similarly under the thumb of a ‘friend’ who is a jealous bully holding them back, but otherwise it’s a little didactic and introspective. There is a somewhat unnecessary spiel about how Hark thinks belief in gods is stupid, this feels a little precocious and something similar has appeared in Hardinge’s other books. It leaves a sour aftertaste and in the case of this book, which is about gods, it actually makes the conclusion less interesting. The character of Selphin could have been given more POV chapters earlier to round the book out.
Hark scavenges with his ‘friend’ Jelt. When a job goes wrong and he is caught, he ends up as an indentured servant to a curator in an institutional home for former priests of his archipelago’s since-departed gods, which presents an opportunity for a new life once his indenture is up. Jelt finds him and presses him to use his new position for more criminal activity - because as Hark puts it, if Jelt can’t have something, no one can. The boys’ discovery of a dangerous relic of the gods that might lead them to uncomfortable knowledge of their true nature puts them, and the whole archipelago, in danger. Hark will have to use all his resources and the help of Selphin, a rebel member of a local gang and the ‘sea-kissed’ (deaf) community, to save himself - that’s if he decides that he wants to go against his friend’s orders to do so.
I think FH is one of the most brilliant children’s authors I’ve ever read (I wish I could get books for adults this good), her writing style, characterisation and worldbuilding are flawless. But I found this quite unpleasant reading. From the outset, Jelt is an emotionally manipulative bully, and the drama hinges more on whether Hark will break away than it does on the main plot. I think it would be brilliant for a child who is similarly under the thumb of a ‘friend’ who is a jealous bully holding them back, but otherwise it’s a little didactic and introspective. There is a somewhat unnecessary spiel about how Hark thinks belief in gods is stupid, this feels a little precocious and something similar has appeared in Hardinge’s other books. It leaves a sour aftertaste and in the case of this book, which is about gods, it actually makes the conclusion less interesting. The character of Selphin could have been given more POV chapters earlier to round the book out.
Graphic: Body horror and Bullying
julianship's review
dark
mysterious
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
3.5
3.5 stars. I really wanted to like this book more than I did, unfortunately. It took a tremendously long time to get going– there's so much setup, and while the last third of the book is fantastic, the beginning really drags. The premise and worldbuilding are exactly up my alley– I love a book that grapples with the material traces of the past, in this case, deeply dangerous artifacts of dead gods. But the book simultaneously took a very long time to tell me interesting and fairly fundamental details about basic worldbuilding while getting off to a slow start (usually it's one or the other!)
I didn't dislike Hark, our POV character, but I found his relationships with other characters frustratingly one-note, in particular the emotionally (and eventually physically) abusive friendship he has with Jelt. I get that this is YA, and we're not always going to get profound explorations of the psychology of a dangerous relationship. But I still wish that we'd seen a side of Jelt that hadn't just been him belittling Hark; the book told me that existed, but because I never saw it on page, it was harder to empathize with Hark's loyalty and inability to leave him behind. Hark cares deeply about Jelt while feeling trapped by him. This is part of the psychology of abuse– it's never just bad parts, or it wouldn't be so hard to leave. The book clearly wants me to feel that tug towards Jelt even while finding him monstrous, but I just can't find it in me– he's never anything but an asshole on page, and not even in a fun way.
That aside, there are some really delightful moments in the book– for my qualms with the pacing, Hardinge's prose is excellent, particularly in action scenes and body horror moments, and the climax is truly gripping. Selphin, who's a Deaf side character we get to see more of in the second half of the book, is a delight, and I could honestly read a whole book about her instead. Overall, I really liked the handling of Deafness/Deaf culture in a world where people who go down into the depths often come up with hearing loss, making it a badge of honor. Initially, I thought, oh, this is a fun worldbuilding detail, but Hardinge doesn't fall into the trap of forgetting about a character's disability or magicking it away when it becomes inconvenient for plot reasons. As Selphin becomes more integral to the story, her Deafness ends up shifting the course of the plot in interesting ways.
Overall, there are great moments in this one, but it took long enough to get going that I had a hard time appreciating them. In part, maybe this is because I did it as an audiobook with a narrator I didn't love. Joshua Akehurst does an acceptable job, but his delivery feels a little flat, even at a higher speed (which is my usual fix for an unengaging narrator.)
I didn't dislike Hark, our POV character, but I found his relationships with other characters frustratingly one-note, in particular the emotionally (and eventually physically) abusive friendship he has with Jelt. I get that this is YA, and we're not always going to get profound explorations of the psychology of a dangerous relationship. But I still wish that we'd seen a side of Jelt that hadn't just been him belittling Hark; the book told me that existed, but because I never saw it on page, it was harder to empathize with Hark's loyalty and inability to leave him behind. Hark cares deeply about Jelt while feeling trapped by him. This is part of the psychology of abuse– it's never just bad parts, or it wouldn't be so hard to leave. The book clearly wants me to feel that tug towards Jelt even while finding him monstrous, but I just can't find it in me– he's never anything but an asshole on page, and not even in a fun way.
That aside, there are some really delightful moments in the book– for my qualms with the pacing, Hardinge's prose is excellent, particularly in action scenes and body horror moments, and the climax is truly gripping. Selphin, who's a Deaf side character we get to see more of in the second half of the book, is a delight, and I could honestly read a whole book about her instead. Overall, I really liked the handling of Deafness/Deaf culture in a world where people who go down into the depths often come up with hearing loss, making it a badge of honor. Initially, I thought, oh, this is a fun worldbuilding detail, but Hardinge doesn't fall into the trap of forgetting about a character's disability or magicking it away when it becomes inconvenient for plot reasons. As Selphin becomes more integral to the story, her Deafness ends up shifting the course of the plot in interesting ways.
Overall, there are great moments in this one, but it took long enough to get going that I had a hard time appreciating them. In part, maybe this is because I did it as an audiobook with a narrator I didn't love. Joshua Akehurst does an acceptable job, but his delivery feels a little flat, even at a higher speed (which is my usual fix for an unengaging narrator.)
Graphic: Body horror, Bullying, and Emotional abuse
akira516's review against another edition
challenging
dark
slow-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? No
- Loveable characters? No
- Diverse cast of characters? N/A
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
Very Slow and boring. It tries to over explain what's happening which makes it even more confusing. The ending was weird and didn't wrap it up at all. There was only one likeable character who dies at the end The villain is annoying and the plot line is obvious. The main characters relationship is terrible.
Graphic: Body horror, Toxic relationship, Gaslighting, and Toxic friendship
Moderate: Death and Murder
lola_milk's review against another edition
adventurous
dark
emotional
mysterious
tense
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Plot
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
Graphic: Toxic friendship
Moderate: Body horror
antimony's review against another edition
adventurous
mysterious
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
read 4 || jan. 2024 even though it took me literally 2 weeks to read this (i was so excited to bring deeplight to ireland and reread it here and i started it on the plane and then just. didn't read at all) i still loved it of course. i think this time around i was left with a new love for dr vyne she's simply so real. she finds out the leaguers are making a god and she's like oh of COURSE i'd love to help and she never even considers they'd want to bring it to life bc it's all about the fascinating science to her.
read 3 || dec. 2022 my favorite book ever is there anything more to say !!! i adore the world i adore the writing i adore the characters i adore the weird creepy frecht of the gods
read 2 || feb. 2022 i love this book quite a bit & i already have another review (on a different edition) detailing how it basically is everything i could want in a book so i will not repeat all that. i adore the world and i love the characters. i also didn't mention this in my last review but i really love the concept of frecht, like something to describe the eldritch beauty of a creature that is much too strange and unknowable to truly be seen as beautiful but undeniably is so anyway. i like that a lot. not sure if i have any more coherent thoughts but maybe read 3 will do that?
read 3 || dec. 2022 my favorite book ever is there anything more to say !!! i adore the world i adore the writing i adore the characters i adore the weird creepy frecht of the gods
read 2 || feb. 2022 i love this book quite a bit & i already have another review (on a different edition) detailing how it basically is everything i could want in a book so i will not repeat all that. i adore the world and i love the characters. i also didn't mention this in my last review but i really love the concept of frecht, like something to describe the eldritch beauty of a creature that is much too strange and unknowable to truly be seen as beautiful but undeniably is so anyway. i like that a lot. not sure if i have any more coherent thoughts but maybe read 3 will do that?
Graphic: Body horror, Emotional abuse, and Injury/Injury detail
Minor: Slavery
kindredbears's review against another edition
adventurous
mysterious
tense
fast-paced
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? It's complicated
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
5.0
Graphic: Body horror
perditorian's review against another edition
adventurous
emotional
funny
hopeful
mysterious
fast-paced
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes
4.5
Moderate: Body horror, Emotional abuse, and Toxic relationship