One of the best things about A Song of Wraiths and Ruin is how it makes its world come alive. It takes place during a festival that only happens once in decades, Solstasia, and it felt magical in a way I hadn't experienced in a long time.
Between the Patron Deities (who doesn't love a good faction-like system?), all the mythical creatures (talking hyenas? chipekwes? serpopards? yes), and the challenges we get to witness both inside the actual Solstasia competition and outside of it (...the wakama match is one of the best scenes), this world was so interesting to read about, and just fun.
It also felt grounded. One has to see a city's worst sides to fall in love with it, and this book never shies away from Ziran's issues - the xenophobia, the corruption, the opulence existing side by side with poverty; the way the city's history might be darker than anyone imagines, with real repercussions on the present.
A Song of Wraiths and Ruin is narrated in dual PoV, and while I liked both protagonists, I was surprised the most by Malik.
Boys in YA often seem to come from the same mold, especially if they have a "love interest" role. They react to traumatic events and other difficulties in almost always the same ways, the designated Acceptable Manly Ways™, which are to use sarcasm to cover wounds or become closed-off and brooding, which ~enhances their mysteriousness~.
Malik has anxiety.
Malik has anxiety and several panic attacks on the page. Some very realistically portrayed ones, by which I mean uncool and embarrassing and weird and oh no now you're going to cry again; and this book gets it. It gets how panic attacks lower your self-esteem and feed off your low self-esteem; it gets what it means to grow up knowing that everyone kind of sees you as the village freak; it gets how they make living (and taking part in an important competition) in a place that discriminates against Malik's people even more difficult. This books gets it, and that's why this first chapter of Malik's story ends up being about self-acceptance.
(This book also has content warnings in the beginning, which is kind and also shouldn't be rare.)
Karina couldn't be more different from Malik, being the daughter of Ziran's Sultana, and yet the two have a lot in common - in the end, they just want to be accepted as they are. Karina wants people to appreciate who she is, but also knows she doesn't really want to rule. She's an impulsive mess, which made for a lot of really interesting developments, some of which involving necromancy! I love her.
Her story also involved learning to see the people around her more clearly instead of taking them for granted, and the way it ended was just... perfect. (The female friendships...)
And since I forgot to mention that before: this book is casually queer-inclusive. When Karina decides that the Solstasia competition reward will be her hand in marriage - she needs the heart of a prince: an important ingredient to perform a certain necromantic ritual - the competition isn't closed to women, because law says she can have a wife. Now she just has to make sure that a woman won't win, because that's someone she can't use the corpse of!
Please don't let the marketing mislead you. Before I actually tried this book, all I knew about it was that it had the enemies-to-lovers trope and that someone needed to save a younger sibling, which didn't make it sound interesting at all - I don't even like these tropes. Especially the sibling one. And I still loved this, because it's that good. It helps that Malik has more than one sister, so you get to see that he cares about his siblings, instead of being told about it for all the book and shown the contrary. It helps, more than anything, that this book puts thought into things as it builds over its premise - so it doesn't even matter that I wasn't so drawn to the premise.
Also, publishing should stop being so attached to comp titles, because the way the marketing (nonsensically) pushed the comparison with Children of Blood and Bone almost made me not read this. Just because it's West African fantasy it doesn't mean that they're alike.
I listened to the audiobook, which I liked: in this novel storytelling is a form of magic, so it's great to have someone tell it to you.