Noah Van Nguyen has, once again, brought a corner of the Mortal Realms to life. Yndrasta, The Celestial Spear is as much about life in the forests and tundra of Ghur as it is the eponymous Stormcast. Van Nguyen’s previous novel, The Godeater’s Son, stood out partly because of the fidelity of the world-building, with attention paid to developing different cultures and linguistic features, and he repeats the trick here. The culture of the nomadic reindeer-herding inhabitants of Rikka-Min draws on that of the real-world Sámi, but the characters we meet aren’t poorly-sketched parodies. The band thrown together in the opening chapters are economically developed, all with compelling histories and relationships that nicely add to the story.
As with this novel’s preceding short, Monsters, Van Nguyen’s take on the Stormcast is complicated. Yndrasta is more inhuman than anything, but still relatable. The repetition of her titles, most notably ‘Sigmar’s most perfect daughter’ rings ever more hollow each time- is that something to actually be proud of? Her actions throughout the book undercut the notion that her brethren are heroic, altruistic or noble- or at least as these terms are often understood. We get flashbacks of her fragmented memories that serve to inform her of what drove her to be the sort to be selected by Sigmar, and also what this has cost her. Yes, she is serving a greater good, but the novel leads the reader to consider the cost of these actions- once again, how different is she from the monsters she hunts?
This book isn’t self-important, pious or boring though. The opening is unsettling and has a sense of unfolding horror, the action scenes are exciting and the inevitable pitched battle at the conclusion is bloody and chaotic. The book managed to transport me from my garden on the hottest day of the year to Ghurish winter with ease. Van Nguyen makes Yndrasta genuinely awesome to the mortals she encounters and her battlefield prowess does the same to the reader. There’s a scene involving a whale that does this incredibly well, but also has possibly made me laugh more than in any other BL novel. There’s a heart to this book, it has a rare for BL exploration of romantic and familial love, and this helps to add to the stakes of the story.
The author has done more than any other to get be not only interested in but invested in the setting. Cannot wait to read more from him.