Book Review – Uprooted – Naomi Novik

After a share of Naomi Novik books, she has become an instant read for me. The way she brings the world and characters alive us second to none. Her Uprooted title was the same rollercoaster ride i have come to expect from her. My rating was an obvious 5/5 and if you choose not to read my spoiler’s below, I highly recommend it to anyone wondering if you should take the plunge.

**Spoilers Below**

We discover Agnieszka as she is growling up in a village, Dvernik. We watch her grow living close to ”The Wood’. The Wood is a new kind of protagonist that surfaces as a corrupted forest, attempting to take over everything. In exchange for protection from the wood, the resident sorcerer, Dragon. Every seventeen years he takes a subject from them, keep them within his castle, and teaches them. Agnieszka is sure he will choose her best friend from her class as she is so kind and beautiful. .

Though on the day, he surprises the entire village by choosing Agnieszka herself Shocked and terrified, she relocates to his tower. Shortly thereafter, she discovers she is a sorcerer and he chose her to make sure she received proper training. When the Dragon is away from the tower, her home town sends an urgent message requesting aid. Unable to bear it, Agnieszka escapes the tower and charges in with her limited knowledge and the Dragon’s special fire oil to help.

Agnieszka and the Dragon must work together to save the world from the Wood’s swift retribution. Betrayal is behind every turn as the true depth of the it’s reach is uncovered. With their own people turned against them, they must rise above to destroy it. This retelling of Beauty and the Beast fits right in with it’s fairy tale atmosphere and epic proportions.

Book Review- N.K. Jemisin – The Fifth Season

This was my first N.K. Jemisin book and her writing style is certainly a unique voice. Her world building was a unique for me as well since the world itself isn’t just a passive observer. It has earthquakes and explosions and all manner of cyclical destruction. I gave this book a 4 out of 5.

 
There is widespread oppression of orogenes, who are mutant beings with powers to either create massive destruction or alleviate it within the earth’s crust. This creates fear and anger among the normal inhabitants, which bleeds into using them and their bodies in morbid unacceptable ways. Overall, between the world and its inhabitants, everyone grows up in this gritty world and defending their right to live. The most fascinating aspect of the lives within the world, is that they define their lives by how many ‘Fifth Seasons’ they have survived. Fifth Seasons are seasons where the entire earth dies. There is no food, and no food grows. The populations are used to this aspect, but they must survive however long these seasons are, until the earth begins to grow again. 


The book’s story arc overlaps with three orogenes women as they progress through life and loss. An older woman, Essun, is living in hiding but she fails to tell her husband what she is. They have two children and when he finds out he murders one and abducts the other. Still reeling from her dead child, her only focus is to find the other and bring her home. 
The mid aged Syenite is sent on a mission with a tenth ring master, Alabaster, to help a town with coral blocking their ship and fishing routes. Once they reach it, someone attempts to murder Alabaster leaving her alone to handle the coral removal. Heaving the earth beneath the waves, she pushes the coral aside to release an obelisk, hidden in the earth. No one really understands what they are for since they were created during a much earlier version of earth. Every orogene that works within the Fulcrum, like Syenite and Alabaster, have opposite assigned guardians. In case they ever turn to evil and murdering people, the guardians are sent to kill them. Without question. To Syenite’s initial confusion, they arrive and try to kill her and Alabaster because she was able to commune with the obelisk. Before they can be killed, a death eater saves them both, transporting them both to a far-off island where they must face their new life without the Fulcrum. As well as what the Fulcrum stood for, which surely wasn’t always for the good.


Finally, the young girl orogene, Damaya, is given away to the Fulcrum’s care after she accidently hurts a boy in her class. She is receiving the same training as Syenite. Damaya becomes obsessed with discovering every aspect of the Fulcrum, since they have free reign of the building and parts of it have been lost time, since it was first built too large. One day, an unknown girl infiltrates Damaya’s class but Damaya knows the other girls to know she isn’t meant to be there. At the end of classes for the day, she tries to ask if Demaya has ever seen a hexagonal room, since it’s supposed to have something special inside. Damaya learns her name is Binof and he is a leader and from a high-ranking family, but she is not orogene. They discover a cavern locked beneath the door that challenges every version of history that is taught at the school. 


All three interludes create a beautifully woven world with equal parts, charm & heartbreak

https://www.goodreads.com/book/show/19161852-the-fifth-season

Book Review – Spinning Silver – Naomi Novik

A rewrite of Rumpelstiltskin, this is a great steady story to the end. I enjoyed Naomi’s writing style and the way she managed to layer many aspects of the story’s character’s together and still created a wonderfully cohesive story. It was published in 2018 as a stand alone novel, but I would welcome additional chapters into this universe. I gave this book an easy 5/5. This new version of the fairy tale includes a great battle between fire and ice, but the rest of the characters go through difficult and sometimes disturbing events to reach their happy ending.

** Alert, Spoilers Below **

Set in the world of Lithvas, with a medieval flavor of princess and princes, the story begins with Miryem and her father’s money lending business. Already impoverished, her mother soon becomes ill and creeps toward the edge of death, while her father remains incapable of collecting the full debt of his borrowers. Miryem decides she is done being poor and to procure medicine for her mother, she begin’s collecting her father’s debt for him.

She discovers she is good at it but holds the borrowers to their terms, forcing them to pay back their debts sometimes with non money items. Soon they have money for themselves and to fix the repair the house and Miryem discovers she is gifted and purchasing items from other locations and reselling them at a good price, or spinning Silver into Gold as the saying goes.

Meanwhile, while she is performing rounds on borrowers, one planter who can’t pay back his debt, she suggests his strong young daughter come to her house to perform chores and work off his debt. Wanda soon becomes irreplaceable addition to the household.

Miryem’s ability to create gold attracts the notice of the Staryk king who thrice brings her swaths of their magical silver, telling her if it isn’t transformed, he will turn her to ice or his queen if she succeeds. She takes the silver to a jeweler and they create first a ring, then a necklace and finally a crown. The Duke’s daughter, who is not especially beautiful, becomes breathtaking upon donning the trio of Staryk silver. All three times, she turns the silver to gold and he comes for her, ferreting her away to the magical ice kingdom of Staryk.

Meanwhile, Irina, Daughter of the Duke of Lithvas and the new owner of the trio of Staryk silver, soon becoming the wife of a Tsar, Tsarina herself. She has a great grandmother Staryk, which means the silver from their realm calls to her. Her new Tsar husband, Miryem, battled through life with a demon in tow. The demon of fire, intends to harvest her soul slowly and painfully. Her Staryk background and their silver, allows her to escape through mirrors and evade being in close quarters with the Tsar. She offers a bargain for the King Staryk’s soul instead of her own and her countrymen.

After a long battle between Staryk and the Fire lord, the Staryk becomes imprisoned within a silver chain and circle of candles from their realm. The Tsar intends to drain Staryk slowly and painfully ebb his life force away and demands to know his real name, which he refuses to relinquish. Killing the King Staryk, will stop the extended winter in Lithvas, but it will also kill the kingdom of Staryk, and everyone in it.

Miryem betrayed the Ice King and tried to kill him, but eventually realizes her mistake, and tries to free him from the silver chain’s imprisonment bonds. The fire lord catches her and injuries both of them heavily before they manage to escape into Lithvas. Miryem and her companions are forced to carry him to a special spot for crossing into the realm of Staryk. Before they can, the fire lord captures Irina again, and forces her to use her Staryk silver on a mirror to bring him into the realm, set to destroy the Kingdom of Ice.

The final twenty pages cover Miryem agreeing to help fight the fire lord, but on the condition that the extended winter must end upon Lithvas and that his people are not allowed on their side anymore. Riding a wild deer into holy frozen mountain only to find its frozen waterfall unleashed onto the people. Staryk and his people fight valiantly but are unable to overcome him. Miryem lures him into the mountain and changes silver to gold in an enclosed storeroom releasing the equivalent of sunlight on him, finally dispatching him.

The end is a happy one, where everyone gets who they want or need. I strongly recommend adding this to your reading list.