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hobbithopeful's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? Character
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Diverse cast of characters? No
- Flaws of characters a main focus? No
3.75
This is a story about war, and a girl trying to get her sister back while keeping her magic a secret. Toma has lived a relatively uneventful life, if you count the fact her family is undead and yet can still walk and talk thanks to her magic. Her peaceful life is soon completely upended when her sister is kidnapped. She will have to venture across a country ravaged by civil war to get her sister back, meeting unlikely companions along the way.
I almost expected it to end with the 3 main characters as a throuple because the book touts itself as being LGBT. I wouldn't label this as an LGBT book even though the authors says that
There were parts of it that I liked, and some parts I didn't. The world building and lore is truly excellent. (We all know I love world building!) And I am so grateful that there was a glossary, so many books don't have that and need it! But some of the characters I just wanted *more* from. After some author revelations, it's hard not to look at this book differently. The way Toma has to hide her magic and not reveal who she really is for fear of ostracization or worse. I can't imagine, and would never be able to imagine what is like to have to hide who you are for years and years and years, for fears of being hurt or bullied, or worse. I think because my experience with this book was up and down, I will read another book by the author and see what I think. While being a consistent author is great, being an author that improves with each book is even better, there is no limit to how great they will become.
Graphic: Death, Violence, Grief, Fire/Fire injury, and War
Moderate: Sexual harassment
If there was a way to give this book between a 3.75 and a 4 I would.booksthatburn's review against another edition
- 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
Because Toma was raised by undead for a large portion of her life, there are a lot of things where her reasoning gets her to a workable solution by a very strange route. Her traveling companions don’t usually try to correct her, as her worldview is so fundamentally different from theirs they might not even know where to begin. In matters of the undead, she eventually gets them more comfortable. In matters of society, war, and prejudice, the tsar and the commoner tend to vehemently disagree while Toma listens to them both and makes up her own mind. Vanya is part of a persecuted minority, his situation made more precarious because he has magic. This would be fine if he were noble, but commoners with magic are thought of as unclean or cursed, somehow fundamentally different than nobles with the same powers.
I enjoyed the array of undead types who appear late in the book. The timing means that the worldbuilding as far as human society and the current conflict are well established before the differences between types of undead begin to matter in the story.
Toma and Mikhail travel for a while before meeting Vanya, which helps with balancing the interactions between them. Toma and Mikhail establish a rapport, then Vanya finds his place in their trio. Toma is the only point-of-view character, but in at least one instance she overhears a discussion between Vanya and Mikhail which makes it clear they have built a friendship separate from and in parallel with their friendships with her. It never feels like an infodump because the three main characters have legitimate reasons to explain things to each other. For each of them it might be some very fundamental aspect, but their experiences have been so disparate as to feel like a different world.
Graphic: Body horror, Death, Gore, Gun violence, Violence, Xenophobia, Blood, Grief, Religious bigotry, and Classism
Moderate: Confinement, Cursing, Panic attacks/disorders, Medical content, Kidnapping, Medical trauma, Death of parent, Fire/Fire injury, and Alcohol
Minor: Child death, Self harm, Excrement, Cannibalism, and Sexual harassment
moonytoast's review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
- Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated
4.0
Definitely recommend this for anyone who enjoys young adult fantasy books like the Grishaverse or even historical fantasies set in the nineteenth or early twentieth century!
Graphic: Death, Gun violence, Violence, Blood, Murder, War, and Injury/Injury detail
Moderate: Body horror, Gore, Sexual assault, Religious bigotry, Death of parent, and Sexual harassment
natashaleighton_'s review against another edition
- Plot- or character-driven? A mix
- Strong character development? Yes
- Loveable characters? Yes
4.0
It follows seventeen year old Toma who has spent the last seven years living in the wilderness, adopted by a family ofUpyri—human corpses reanimated by magic—and lives happily with her sister Galina and their parents. But, when the dethroned Tsar, Mikhail crash lands outside her home whilst fleeing from revolutionaries, Galina ends up captured by them.She’ll do anything to rescue Galina even if it means diving headfirst into the Empire’s bloody political conflict and helping Mikhail.
The pair soon meet Vanya, a charming commoner branded as a witch by his own neighbors, the unlikely trio bond over trying to restore Mikhail’s magic and protect the empire from Koschei, the brutal revolutionary leader who deposed Mikhail—and whose forces have now stolen the castle. Vanya has his magic, and Mikhail has his title, but if Toma can’t dig deep and find her power in time, all of their lives including Galina’s will be at Koschei’s mercy.
I genuinely enjoyed every second of Aden Polydoros’ richly detailed world building & loved how viscerally immersive the setting felt. I also really enjoyed the fantastical elements and folkloric beings we encounter (like the man tickling Mavka and river based Rusalka) that made me want to research more about them.
All the characters were well developed and wonderfully compelling, Toma our protagonist was one such character—driven by her love (and unwavering loyalty) for her sister. But, I must admit my fave character had to be the charismatic Vanya who manages to keep his easy going and friendly nature despite the atrocities he’s witnessed firsthand from being Strannik—one of the Empire’s religiously persecuted minority groups.
The conflicts that all three encounter (and previously experienced) were absolutely heartbreaking at times, and made all the more poignant knowing that they parallel real world situations (both past and present) and struggles that diaspora/minority communities endure—especially in terms of cultural identity and nationality.
The pacing was a little slower than I would’ve liked but, the chance to explore the more surreal (fantastical) elements, as well as the slow burn romance between Toma and Vanya definitely helped to make up for it.
Overall, a gorgeously wrought and uncompromisingly dark fantasy that I genuinely couldn’t put down! Though I do warn there’s quite a lot of graphic violence (blood, death, body horror, gore) so do bear in mind if you decide to pick this up.
Graphic: Body horror, Death, Gore, Violence, Blood, Religious bigotry, War, and Injury/Injury detail