Taylor, Laini. Daughter of Smoke and Bone. New York: Little, Brown and Company, 2011. Print.
418 pages.
Reviewed by Jess d'Artagnan Love
Karou lives in Prague and where she leads a double life: in one life she is a young art student, and in the other, she works with her chimera family collecting teeth from around the world. The teeth are used by the mysterious Brimstone, essentially her father figure, and Karou is tasked with trying to figure out what really happens in Brimstone's shop. A monkey wrench is thrown in her plans when she meets Akiva, a Seraphim, and her portals to Brimstone's world are destroyed, leaving her stranded in the human realm.
As I read the book, I found it a bit challenging to keep up with what the chimera look like. Chimera are half human and half animal and each chimera character is a different combination of the two. What I found most helpful, was leaving a post-it flag bookmark on pages of chimera descriptions that I could flip back to for reference.
That being said, Laini Taylor is a true wordsmith and masterfully describes characters and settings. The way she painted Prague and the Poison Kitchen made me want to hop on a plane and head there to purchase some property--it is the exact kind of place I would love to be to sit and write.
While Prague was expertly crafted, I definitely related to Karou's sense of spiritual "homelessness." She lives with a sense of not really having a "true" home where things just feel right and whole. I experienced this quite a bit throughout my life and have come to accept that "home" for me is in multiple places across the globe in the same way it is multiple realms for Karou.
My biggest problem with Daughter of Smoke and Bone was the exceptionally long flashback toward the end of the book. The plot is a typical nonlinear plot that moves from past to present fairly seamlessly until the last third of the novel. In the last third of the novel there is a 75 page flashback. This was exhausting because through that entire 75 pages, I was still trying to maintain the tension created by the present-tense story line. While I understand why Taylor may have chosen to organize the flashback this way (which I will refrain from discussing due to spoilers), I also know there are better ways to handle this. This was my biggest issue with the novel and what kept me from giving 4 stars instead of 3.
Aside from that, I really loved Taylor's prose. She used some wonderfully cozy animal metaphors and I particularly liked the metaphors she used with butterflies and cats. It created a little bit of hygge in the story that was warming and sweet.
Would I read this book again? Yes. I am also planning on reading the next book in the series.
Recommended for: Fans of YA urban fantasy.
Not recommend for: Readers who don't enjoy fantasy.
3 darts/stars out of 5
Word Bank (new-to-me vocabulary)
- accretes (p. 410)
- atavism (p. 316)
- caracal (p. 362)
- chivvied (p. 81)
- concrescence (p. 391)
- demurral (p. 80)
- djellaba (p. 86)
- effulgent (p. 362)
- eidolon (p. 274)
- enfeeble (p. 199)
- fricative (p. 53)
- gnawa (p. 82)
- hummock (p. 267)
- ineffable (p. 196)
- ineluctable (p. 382)
- limned (p. 77)
- lintel (p. 196)
- medina (p. 78)
- menhirs (p. 112)
- moiling (p. 93)
- nacre (p. 410)
- rickrack (p. 109)
- rill (p. 381)
- sallies (p. 235)
- shrive (p. 172)
- spinnaker (p. 367)
- souks (p. 81)
- susurrous (p. 90)
- tadelakt (p. 299)
- tarboosh (p. 81)
- temerity (p. 193)
- thurible (p. 113)
- touts (p. 80)
- welter (p. 208)
- zelij (p. 299)
Laini Taylor's website: http://www.lainitaylor.com/
My Youtube review: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G2Dns_Gxfd8
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