Since my Goodreads friends are such big fans of Jennifer Nielsen, I decided it was high time I tried one of her books. I chose this standalone because 1) the cover and interior formatting <3 and 2) the concept looked interesting. ;)
It was good. :D
I always love me a good medieval setting, and this book had it all. Dungeons, trees, primitive medicine, hardy rural folk…
Speaking of hardy rural folk, while Ani wasn’t my favorite character ever, this was one thing I liked about her. She could have tended to be the classic belligerent “strong female character” who saw things no else did, started a revolution, etc., but instead--while she definitely had some of those classic things going on--I got the idea that she was mostly a product of her culture. (Though she was definitely a troublemaker even at home.) The more I heard about the River People, the more they reminded me of people I knew back when I lived in the country. ;)
Okay, so this book made me feel what the characters were feeling. Which is huge. I was honestly blown away by how real Ani’s fear of the Scourge was. I really felt it. The same with how hungry--starving practically--the characters were at times. Masterful.
Plotwise, this book was like a way better version of a short story I once wrote and a cool-looking but no good dystopian book I DNFed earlier this year. That said, I called 93% of it, but the super surprising 7% was awesome. Plus banter. *is still blown away* *like an autumn leaf*
Speaking of BANTER, my weakness, by the way… Boy, was it in this book! I wish I could type some in here for you, but I’m afraid this review would get waaaay too long. ;) Broken needles, Ani’s singing, Weevil’s unique greetings to her… And let’s not forget that clever argument about who was the worse friend that suddenly turned too real and cruel and heartbreaking. *cries* Ani and Weevil’s friendship was one of my favorites I’ve read about in a long time. Balancing each other, working together, loyalty, occasionally arguing, hard truths, sweet moments. Let’s just say Ani’s lock picking metaphor was perfect. When I read the author’s note and found out how she’d based their friendship on the song “500 Miles”, I just about squealed. <3 <3
I also liked some of the side characters, and the personal challenge Della posed to Ani was quite interesting.
Just a note, rebellious attitudes and stealing are redefined (i.e. “stealing” as “borrowing”, though someone called that out for what it was once). There were also some medical details, but fortunately, these were not described very much. Also, one very sweet kiss between teenagers.
Altogether, this was an enjoyable read! I look forward to trying more from this author. ;)
(And I might grab you all a couple quotes later. ;) )