Thank you to dear Lyndall for sending me an early copy of her manuscript in exchange for a bookseller blurb!
I loved Lakesedge and connected with Lyndall on Instagram after I read the arc and I was so excited to read Forestfall that I’m so grateful for the opportunity. Truly, words cannot describe the depths of my gratitude and overall excitement. While I read this back in January, I wanted to wait to post my review until digital ARCs had gone out.
As a warning, this review will contain spoilers for the previous novel, Lakesedge, but it’s spoiler-free for Forestfall.
Forestfall picks up where Lakesedge left off: with Violeta Graceling in the World Below at the Lord Under’s side in exchange for fixing the corruption and saving the ones she loved above, leaving love interest Rowan Sylvanan and her brother Arien Graceling behind at Lakesedge Estate.
Above, they believe she’s dead, but after Rowan realizes they are still connected with the tethering spell, he becomes desperate to get her back, no matter if it means accepting and growing the corruption inside him that made him a monster once again.
And Below, Leta struggles to come to terms with the consequences of her deal, and her connection to the Lord Under, and what her life (or undeath) will be in the World Below as Lord Under hides her away in a cottage he created behind walls of brambles from what else may lurk in the gloom.
Forestfall trades one exceptionally moody and wonderfully atmospheric setting for another: Lakesedge’s gothic estate setting replaced by a fantastical wooded realm of the dead, with blood red heartwood trees, walls of brambles with wicked sharp thorns, pervasive silver mist, huddled souls gently carried in the arms of their death god, glowing moth lights, and dresses of cobwebs and moth wings.
Unlike Lakesedge, which was solidly from Leta’s point of view, Forestfall switches between our two equally morose and messy protagonists: Leta and Rowan. Both of them are incredibly flawed, desperate, and raw. Separately, we see both of them at work trying to reunite, however they can, with whatever power is at their fingertips. I appreciated Rowan’s chapters because the book would have been incomplete without them, but I found myself far less interested in his chapters than Leta’s, and I would anxiously await her next chapter whenever I was reading his. This was more so my personal preference than anything else, and mainly due to Leta’s chapters just having a more interesting setting, because I feel like Lyndall did a good job writing both POVs and differentiating the voices of our two protagonists.
I love how the World Below was explored, from the landscape itself, to the addition of new monstrous characters (think too many eyes, deer masks, feathered wings, clawed feet, moth wing cloaks) to Leta and the Lord Under’s undeniable attraction and relationship dynamic. I am an absolute SUCKER for a good “death and the maiden” trope. From fighting the attraction, to giving in, to weaponizing it. All of it was deliciously dark and seductive, and delightful to read.
Leta’s regret and sorrow ran just as deeply as her indomitable will to survive and her resolve to seize any power in order to do so. Reading as her desolation gave way to determination was a fiercely emotional but undeniably strong journey over the course of the novel. Her scrambling to grasp (or steal) any power necessary to survive in a world not meant for a young girl alone was admirable, and something any woman can relate to.
But after Lakesedge, we all know that great magic comes with high costs. The power Leta takes in order to return to the World Above turns her less and less human, and more apart of the World Below than ever before. She’s torn in two different directions: her first love Rowan and life itself, and her feelings for Lord Under and more power than she could ever imagine in a land of the dead.
I often wondered how this book was going to end, between delighted chortles as desperate messy kisses were stolen and blood was spilled for magic and the setting continued to unnerve and astound me. But I’m pleased to say it ended in a satisfactory and fitting conclusion, albeit somewhat somber and bittersweet. Admittedly, I had hoped for something else to happen between the characters at the end, but I can’t say I was disappointed and overall highly enjoyed it and gobbled it up in a single sitting.
Lyndall Clipstone’s “World at the Lakesedge” duology is a must-read for anyone who loves messy characters, monstrous love interests, death and the maiden trope, alchemical magic, and gothic and atmospheric settings.
Forestfall was an epic conclusion to the story that started with Lakesedge, and Lyndall Clipstone is a master at gorgeously atmospheric settings, darkly lush descriptions, perfectly flawed protagonists, and monstrous love interests that are the ideal amount of both frightening and seductive.