David Baldacci has a long career writing adult mystery-thrillers (with book covers indistinguishable from John Grisham, James Patterson etc. etc.), so I felt like I'd never heard of him when I saw this Young Adult Fantasy - in fact, I still have a hard time reconciling the two authors as the same man! Never having read anything by Baldacci before, I can't compare writing or narrative styles between the genres, but was pleasantly engaged in The Finisher. With some very lovely (and dark) illustrations by Nathan Aardvark, this fantasy was not what I was expecting, both in terms of plot and setting.
Vega Jane is not quite fifteen years old but has already been working at Stacks as a Finisher for two years - education is not highly valued in Wormwood. Her younger brother John is still at Learning, as they call it, and is very intelligent. Their parents are in Care, and little more than living vegetables. Their grandfather, Virgil, suffered an 'Event' shortly after their grandmother, Calliope, died, when Vega was only six. An Event is a mysterious thing that no one has seen, which takes a person away, leaving absolutely nothing behind.
Wormwood is a place of rough manners, coarse values and vulgar patriarchy. It is encircled by a wood; beyond that is the Quag, a vast, dangerous terrain populated by terrifying monsters - some of which find their way into the village from time to time. Ruled by a powerful council, there is little reason to enjoy life, hardly any food for most who live there, and real terrors to keep people in line.
Vega's life changes the night her friend and fellow Finisher, Quentin, flees Wormwood and goes into the Quag. He leaves behind a map of the Quag for Vega Jane, which she inks onto her body so she can destroy the physical copy. Despite being questioned by the Council, she maintains her secrets, not even sharing them with her best friend, Delph. The map itself doesn't change anything for Vega - with a brother to look after and parents in Care, she has no interest in following Quentin to certain death - but it drives her to look for answers in places long barred: such as Stacks. The old, tall building with its hidden floors proves to be full of tricks and powerful objects, and in its rooms Vega discovers much more to her world than she ever knew.
There is much that still puzzles me about this story, particularly the setting, which doesn't always make logical sense. They are one isolated village that is in possession of materials that they do not seem to produce, and certainly their are many questions as to its origins and its purpose - and why the Council are so determined to prevent people from leaving it. (It did, of course, bring to mind the film The Village, which I love, but this has little in common with that.) I had read it as a standalone novel, but have just found out that the author is working on the sequel. I'm pleased to hear it, mostly because there are way too many unanswered questions.
The story did not follow the plot that the blurb led me to expect; a disingenuous blurb! Rather, it is the story of Vega Jane's discovery of village secrets and what leads up to her escaping - I don't feel that mentioning that is a spoiler, as it's patently clear that she will leave Wormwood. It takes the entire book, all 506 pages, to get to that point, though - had I known that, I would have read it differently, relaxed more into it. It's interesting, reading a Fantasy novel by an author who doesn't typically write fantasy: it does not always follow the rules, making it both fresh and also, at times, a bit confusing. It's a tricky world to create and lead a reader through: the narrator is steeped in ignorance, on a journey of discovery, but there's an even bigger gulf between the reader and knowledge. A bit more well-placed exposition might have helped smooth the way.
An enjoyable, often exciting read with a heroine I genuinely liked.