A review by barb4ry1
To Dream and Die as a Taniwha Girl by Benedict Patrick

5.0

I missed Kaimana and Rakau, my favorite Yarnsworld's duo. The title alone suggests exciting things to happen, but nothing prepared me for the atrocities committed by Benedict Patrick. I thought he was one of the good guys. Now, I'm not so sure. At all.

Kaimana and Rakau enjoy their friendship and warm waters of the atoll. Sometimes they help islanders to chase off annoying taniwha (monsters). Sometimes they help taniwha to deal with petty and cruel humans who see them as a trophy. Or food.

But they mostly keep to themselves.

Things change, dramatically, when they discover the mouldering corpse of Mataio, the god of taniwha, on a beach. Normally, god's killer should reach godhood immediately after the kill. But it doesn't happen. And Kaimana doesn't like the implications.

To make matters worse, ancient demon schemes to destroy the Atoll and its gods. His overpowered pawn, a spider-faced figure shadows Kaimana’s movements. To say the pawn is deeply troubled is a HUGE understatement.

Bad things happen, but the less you know, the better. How bad, you may ask? Well, punch-you-in-the-gut and shake you for a few days bad. Starting with dark in-world tales (Old Spider and the Grand Mother story's ending will slice you like a razor), and finishing with characters' fates, it is, for the most part, the darkest Yarnsworld novel. You were warned.

I admire Kaimana - she stood against her family, and then her god, for friendship and still lived to tell the tale. She's memorable and relatable, even if she lacks a longterm agenda. Her arc strongly intertwines with the arc of a new character - Sinitalela. A despicable individual you'll learn to hate. She's ruthless and overpowered. Her arc (and it's a SPOILER) focuses on a road to redemption she doesn't deserve.

To Dream and Die as a Taniwha Girl shook me for days. I would love it to have a different ending and to force Benedict Patrick to rethink his daring choices, but, alas, it's too late for that. A great, surprisingly dark book that opens plenty of exciting possibilities for future developments of Yarnsworld's stories.