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thecaptainsquarters 's review for:
Gods of Jade and Shadow
by Silvia Moreno-Garcia
Ahoy there me mateys! I received this fantasy eARC from NetGalley in exchange for an honest review. So here be me honest musings . . .
I fell in love with Moreno-Garcia's work because of her stellar vampire novel, certain dark things. So I was very much looking forward to this Mayan fairy-tale set during the Jazz age in Mexico. And this book was absolutely wonderful.
I have to admit that I have very little knowledge of Mayan history and culture outside of the bare basics from me trip to Mexico when I was in me early teens. That was a long time ago and facts fall out of me noggin. So this book was a delightful foray into Mayan folklore. I was often looking up places, names, and words while reading to enrich me understanding of what I was reading about. These diversions did not cause me to lose the grip or flow of the storytelling. Rather it intensified the enjoyment.
Part of this was the languorous journey of the plot. The story had the feeling of reading an older historical saga in terms of style. The plot was not full of heady action or serious psychological studies. Instead it was very much showing the individual journey of Casiopea Tun and how she handles the quest she finds herself on.
Casiopea has always longed to get away from the house of her tyrannical, rich grandfather and have a life of her own somewhere else. She has secret dreams of riding in an automobile, dancing the night away, and swimming in the sea. These wishes are held close-to-heart and never spoken aloud. But Casiopea's upbringing is at odds with her rebellious, curious nature. That curious nature is what leads her to inadvertently release a captive Mayan Death God and change the trajectory of her life.
I absolutely loved Casiopea and the Death God, Hun-Kamé. There was no predictability in terms of their journey or relationship. Casiopea truly felt like a real girl thrown into an extraordinary situation. She has no real magic but that of her inner strength as a person and her moral compass. The change in the relationship between Casiopea and Hun-Kamé was subtle and yet absolutely compelling. I loved how the magic worked between them.
The writing style was once again lyrical and beautiful and unique. It is a story that feels a bit unreal and as a reader I was both engaged and somewhat unattached like I was floating over the story watching from afar. And yet I was also very much concerned with Casiopea's circumstances and how the story would pan out.
This weird dichotomy only served to intensify the feelings that I was experiencing a fairy tale in a world way outside of me own. I very much enjoyed reading another fairy tale based on a culture that is completely unfamiliar and yet absolutely human in its experiences and feelings that arise from following Casiopea's story.
This is also a book that for me had the perfect ending. Hopeful and tragic and magical and yet somehow completely realistic. Seriously I need to pick up all of Silvia Moreno-Garcia's work. She floats me boat.
So lastly . . .
Thank you Random House!
Check out me other reviews at https://thecaptainsquartersblog.wordpress.com/
I fell in love with Moreno-Garcia's work because of her stellar vampire novel, certain dark things. So I was very much looking forward to this Mayan fairy-tale set during the Jazz age in Mexico. And this book was absolutely wonderful.
I have to admit that I have very little knowledge of Mayan history and culture outside of the bare basics from me trip to Mexico when I was in me early teens. That was a long time ago and facts fall out of me noggin. So this book was a delightful foray into Mayan folklore. I was often looking up places, names, and words while reading to enrich me understanding of what I was reading about. These diversions did not cause me to lose the grip or flow of the storytelling. Rather it intensified the enjoyment.
Part of this was the languorous journey of the plot. The story had the feeling of reading an older historical saga in terms of style. The plot was not full of heady action or serious psychological studies. Instead it was very much showing the individual journey of Casiopea Tun and how she handles the quest she finds herself on.
Casiopea has always longed to get away from the house of her tyrannical, rich grandfather and have a life of her own somewhere else. She has secret dreams of riding in an automobile, dancing the night away, and swimming in the sea. These wishes are held close-to-heart and never spoken aloud. But Casiopea's upbringing is at odds with her rebellious, curious nature. That curious nature is what leads her to inadvertently release a captive Mayan Death God and change the trajectory of her life.
I absolutely loved Casiopea and the Death God, Hun-Kamé. There was no predictability in terms of their journey or relationship. Casiopea truly felt like a real girl thrown into an extraordinary situation. She has no real magic but that of her inner strength as a person and her moral compass. The change in the relationship between Casiopea and Hun-Kamé was subtle and yet absolutely compelling. I loved how the magic worked between them.
The writing style was once again lyrical and beautiful and unique. It is a story that feels a bit unreal and as a reader I was both engaged and somewhat unattached like I was floating over the story watching from afar. And yet I was also very much concerned with Casiopea's circumstances and how the story would pan out.
This weird dichotomy only served to intensify the feelings that I was experiencing a fairy tale in a world way outside of me own. I very much enjoyed reading another fairy tale based on a culture that is completely unfamiliar and yet absolutely human in its experiences and feelings that arise from following Casiopea's story.
This is also a book that for me had the perfect ending. Hopeful and tragic and magical and yet somehow completely realistic. Seriously I need to pick up all of Silvia Moreno-Garcia's work. She floats me boat.
So lastly . . .
Thank you Random House!
Check out me other reviews at https://thecaptainsquartersblog.wordpress.com/