Written by Lesley Livingston
Zando Young Readers
978-1-63893-018-1
416 pp.
Ages 14+
January 2023
Hold onto the reins of your horse or your chariot because Lesley Livingston
is going to take you on an epic ride through Celtic mythology. There
will be conflict and battles, romance and magic, questionable
birthrights, and imminent death, and oh so many characters. Like I said,
epic.
Young
Neve lives with her older sister Úna and their father who is the Dagda,
leader of the Tuatha Dé, the descendants of the Scathach Queen, and
rulers of Eire. Neve wishes she could become a warrior and that her
sister could become the next Dagda, but neither is possible for the two
crown princesses. Still Neve likes to sneak away from the palace and
head into more dangerous areas like Blackwater Town of the oppressed Fir
Bolg villagers. As a child, Neve had met a rogue Druid apprentice and
thief named Ronan on one of these jaunts and he'd helped her fight a
demon using a banned spell stone. Seven years later the two restless
spirits become reacquainted when Neve saves Ronan from the óglach who
are sent out with their harrow hounds to hunt down illicit magic users
and spell traders. But more than this reintroduction is the
recognition that there is some magic between them, and not just of the
romantic kind.
As
Gofannon, the Dagda's chief Druid advisor and monument builder, begins
to assert control while the Dagda obsesses over the erection of his
formidable mortuary temple, it becomes evident that there is much
manipulation of persons and magic in a struggle for power. Who will
survive and who will rule is all up to Lesley Livingston.
This is another world, something Lesley Livingston
creates with finesse. It's Eire, long ruled by the Tuatha Dé people, led by
the Dagda after defeat of the shape-shifting Fomori
and their elite female warriors, the Faoladh. It's the oppression of
peasants and the Druids usurping the power of magic. It's a high
fantasy built upon Celtic mythology with mythical creatures, potent magic
and struggles for control. But it's also the story of a boy and a girl
from different backgrounds who are drawn together to make the world
right for themselves and others.
The two of them would never truly be able to understand each other. Or each other's worlds. They both carried hidden fire, but they were not the same. Unleashed, Ronan's would be snuffed out by harrow hounds.Neve's, he feared, might just burn until the whole realm was on fire. (pg. 125)
This
is Zando Young Readers inaugural young adult novel, and I can't think of
a more dramatic entry to the YA booksphere than with Lesley Livingston and her Queen Among the Dead. Both have the drama of superb storytelling. As she has done in her earlier series like Wondrous Strange, Starling and The Valiant, Lesley Livingston
drops us into worlds that are real and yet not. That's because she
bases these stories in legitimate mythologies and immerses readers in the cultures
of those legends. The stories were real to those cultures, and they become real
to readers of Lesley Livingston's books. Even though she embeds magic and creates the fantastic characters who can make the impossible happen, she will have you convinced to look up the Fir Domnann and the Fé Fíada in Wikipedia. I won't give it away though I will warn you to keep crib notes as Queen Among the Dead is packed with characters, creatures, places, and cultures of wildly unique names. At over four hundred pages, this novel packs a lot of story and it's a story that will draw you and hold you there and take you for a wild ride. And all I can hope is that there is more story to come because I need more of Neve, a young woman who learned she was a warrior in more ways than she'd known.
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