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[personal profile] alliearend
 

Publisher: HarperTeen (November 10, 2020)
Length: 480 pages
ISBN: 9780062821904
Reading Age: 14 and up

So, I saved reading this particular title for a time when I needed something entertaining. The Ever Cruel Kingdom is the second book in Chupeco’s Never Tilting World duology, following the titular primary installment, which I was a big fan of. This duology reminds me a bit of Kendare Blake’s Three Dark Crowns series which revolves around a set of sisters who, as in every generation, must battle each other to the death in order to ascend to the throne. In Chupeco’s duology, two goddesses are born each generation, one of whom must be sacrificed so that the world, known as Aeon, may persist. Let’s let the official marketing description give us some background: 


After a treacherous journey and a life-shattering introduction to a twin neither knew she had, sisters Haidee and Odessa expected to emerge from the Great Abyss to a world set right. But though the planet is turning once again, the creatures of the abyss refuse to rest without another goddess’s sacrifice. To break the cycle, Haidee and Odessa need answers that lie beyond the seven gates of the underworld, within the Cruel Kingdom itself. The shadows of the underworld may hunger to tear them apart, but these two sisters are determined to heal their world—together.” 


The description centers the twin sisters, Haidee and Odessa, but this novel actually boasts at least four different narrators; in addition to the twins, we get the viewpoints of both Haidee’s romantic interest, Arjun, and Odessa’s romantic interest, Lan. What I found most entertaining about this work is Chupeco’s ability to shift between so many first person perspectives while also maintaining the momentum of the narrative AND carving out the individuality of each storyteller. Each storyteller has their own idiosyncratic way of looking at the world. Odessa, for instance, is constantly fighting off the forces of evil that have pushed her to accept some gifts from the underworld. Arjun is a plucky, devoted hero, who is always up for an adventure, while Lan is a fierce and protective catseye, an individual with particular powers of healing and emotive connection. Haidee is probably the most optimistic of the bunch, with a sunny disposition. 

The surrounding cast of characters is likewise fun, and includes Lisette, a character from Arjun’s ethnic background who also finds herself attracted to Haidee. Vanya, Haidee’s suitor, from the Golden City, has one of the best character arcs. I absolutely loved this minor character because he’s a lover and scholar of texts; he certainly could have been an English major if he didn’t hail from such a fantastically configured storyworld. 


I’ll pause here for my requisite spoiler warning, so do not read beyond this line unless you want to find out more about what happens. 


The conclusion I found to be particularly fitting. Readers definitely do not want to see Haidee or Odessa go the way of the dinosaur, so it was a huge relief to see it was Latona, Haidee and Odessa’s biological mom (Odessa was raised by Asteria, Odessa’s aunt and Latona’s sister), and Asteria take the hit for the problems set up by previous generations. Chupeco puts her own spin on the myths of Orpheus and Eurydice as well as Hades and Persephone, as the twins along with their allies travel into the underworld to seek a solution to Aeon’s troubles. The novel ends with some serious losses and several complications, but the solution to the need for a sacrifice is clever, logical, and fulfilling for readers. 


Upon listening to a podcast this morning (in late July of 2021), Chupeco apparently has about four books in the works. How lucky are we! 


Buy the book HERE.

Review by Stephen Hong Sohn
Edited by Allie Arend


[personal profile] lesliejfernandez

A Review of Rin Chupeco’s The Shadowglass (Sourcebooks Fire, 2019).
By Stephen Hong Sohn

I was so excited to dig into the final installment of the Bone Witch trilogy. The adventures of Tea, Fox, Kalen, Kance, Likh, Zoya, and many others continue! I definitely didn’t want it to end, because I love these characters, and I loved the darkness associated with this series. In any case, let’s let B&N do some work for us: “In the Eight Kingdoms, none have greater strength or influence than the asha, who hold elemental magic. But only a bone witch has the power to raise the dead. Tea has used this dark magic to breathe life into those she has loved and lost...and those who would join her army against the deceitful royals. But Tea's quest to conjure a shadowglass, to achieve immortality for the one person she loves most in the world, threatens to consume her. Tea's heartsglass only grows darker with each new betrayal. Her work with the monstrous azi, her thirst for retribution, her desire to unmask the Faceless—they all feed the darkrot that is gradually consuming her heartsglass. She is haunted by blackouts and strange visions, and when she wakes with blood on her hands, Tea must answer to a power greater than the elder asha or even her conscience. Tea's life—and the fate of the kingdoms—hangs in the balance.”

The thing with this description is that it is sort of misleading. The description wants you to think that Tea is succumbing to a form of dark magic, but readers soon discover that a heartsglass that turns black can be evidence that someone has done something terrible to you. In other words, a blackening heartsglass can be a signifier of trauma rather than of evil. But the cost of wielding any magic in this world is a high one, so Tea’s quest to forge the shadowglass is one that is ultimately related to preserving the lives of those she loves. The problem with the quest for the shadowglass is that it would put an end to the life of her familiar, Fox, who has only retained a form of animation because of the magic that an asha can wield. In any case, much of the narrative momentum is created through the use of the bifurcated structure of two narrators. One appears in italics and is related to a bard that is documenting Tea’s quest, while the other is given to Tea herself.

The one problem I had with this final installment is that I found myself privileging one story over the other, and I became impatient to go back to Tea’s perspective! Chupeco is patient and clever, especially as she leads readers to wonder who it is that’s behind the Blight. You begin to realize halfway through that Tea’s been betrayed, but one of the reveals was definitely surprising and really knocked me off my readerly feet. The conclusion is naturally epic in its scope. It left me a little bit wistful and hoping that there could have been another outcome, but given how much darkness exists in this particular fictional world, it seemed a very fitting resolution. This series is one of my favorites that tends to be on the darker gothic side.

Buy the Book Here:

Review Author: Stephen Hong Sohn
Review Editor: Leslie J. Fernandez

If you have any questions or want us to consider your book for review, please don’t hesitate to contact us via email!
Prof. Stephen Hong Sohn at ssohnucr@gmail.com
Leslie J. Fernandez, PhD Student in English, at lfern010@ucr.edu

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