City of stardust by Georgia Summers

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Violet Everly lives with her uncles, Gabriel, who is rarely around, and Ambrose who cares for her and the isolated old house they live in. Her mother, Marianne has been “travelling" since Violet was 10 and she has never known her father. Violet’s quiet life is rich in fairytales and books overlooked by portraits of the Everly ancestors but all that changes when a strange lady, smelling of vanilla, visits them with her assistant Aleksander. It transpires that the Everlys owe a debt and Marianne is the tithe owed to the witch Penelope and unless she is offered up within ten years, Violet must take her place. While the adults are talking Aleksander, who is not much older than Violet, shows her a magic marble which he manipulates to create a whole galaxy of stars, changing Violet’s life forever in a shower of stardust. As the deadline comes nearer, to break the curse, Violet sets out to find her mother, “long dissolved from her life, like so much salt in the sea….nowhere to be found, yet she is everywhere” p.14. Some of the prose is beautiful but the pace can be slow. It picks up half-way through when there is more action and readers are drawn into the fantasy world through the detailed and engaging descriptions of keys to open magic portals, places with stardust artisans and scholars of arcane knowledge. Worlds where the gods, like the Norse gods, are cruel, vindictive and demand sacrifice. Violet turns out to be brave and loyal in the face of betrayal, and the search for her mother is no sort of happy reunion. This is a novel of complex relationships, with powerful women and weak men, though I did like the uncles who had the raising of a child thrust upon them. A new, young adult writer to watch out for.

Themes: Fantasy, Quest, Power, Relationships.

Sue Speck

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