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THE THITHERLANDS

BLOOD OF THE EXILE

An intriguing but excessively protracted first installment in a fantasy series.

In Black’s fantasy novel, a young human woman is transported to a magical realm.

Twenty-one-year-old Chicago waitress Althea MacMillan is celebrating getting her GED and thinking about little else when a mysterious figure accosts her in an alley and drugs her into unconsciousness. When she wakes, she’s in a strange room with her sarcastic abductor, who taunts her about the stupidity of “Awayfolk” like herself and laments his apparent assignment to escort her to a different world (a world without a name; she dubs it “the Thitherlands”) where her destiny awaits. She’s immediately attended by a towering, bat-winged gargoyle named Athelstan, and the three of them are soon transported to her “manse” in the Thitherlands, an immense and partially ruined wooden keep overseen by a solitary little brusque female goblin. At first, Althea is too stunned to do much more than attend to her basic needs, but after a time she begins to explore the grounds. She befriends an inquisitive crow who turns out to be a shape-shifter named Corvus; in his human form, he is “so beautiful that it almost hurt to look at him.” Readers know early on that Corvus may be hiding duplicitous motives, but Althea is far more concerned with coming to understand her place in her new world. On Earth, she’d bounced around between foster homes and the streets, but in the Thitherlands, she’s apparently an absolute monarch whose word is law. The shock of her new circumstances leaves her unbalanced, which makes her vulnerable to the scheming of a newcomer to the manse (“I mistook blood for family,” she bitterly confesses at one point). Since she can’t go home again, can she make this new world her home?

Black takes the standard fish-out-of-water plot structure of so many fantasy novels and invests it with far more day-to-day details than are usually provided, which is both a strength and a weakness of the novel. The benefit is that the author includes a vast number of relatable pragmatic considerations that confront Althea once she finds herself in her ancestral dwelling in the Thitherlands; readers stumble along with her as she gradually figures out how things work, from prosaic matters of dining and bathing to the broader functioning of her kingdom. The downside of Black’s approach is that the steady ladling out of these details effectively kills dramatic tension and opens the door to a large amount of tedium. The novel is already prone to this problem as it’s drastically overlong (this is, at most, a 400-page story rattling around through well over 700 pages of text)—some readers will doubtlessly finish this first volume hoping the second one is either slimmer or more thickly packed with incident. The author has a sharp ear for lively dialogue and fills many of the pages with characters griping with each other, snapping at each other, and quipping to each other. While the tangles of the actual plot machinations are introduced frustratingly late in the story, they do serve to quicken the book’s final hundred pages. Before this point, there’s a certain level of interest in discovering, alongside Althea, the ways of this odd fantasyland, where she has far deeper roots than she ever had back in Chicago. And it helps that Althea herself is endearingly human.

An intriguing but excessively protracted first installment in a fantasy series.

Pub Date: N/A

ISBN: N/A

Page Count: 776

Publisher: Self

Review Posted Online: June 20, 2025

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ALCHEMISED

Although the melodrama sometimes is a bit much, the superb worldbuilding and intricate plotline make this a must-read.

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  • New York Times Bestseller

Using mystery and romance elements in a nonlinear narrative, SenLinYu’s debut is a doorstopper of a fantasy that follows a woman with missing memories as she navigates through a war-torn realm in search of herself.

Helena Marino is a talented young healer living in Paladia—the “Shining City”—who has been thrust into a brutal war against an all-powerful necromancer and his army of Undying, loyal henchmen with immortal bodies, and necrothralls, reanimated automatons. When Helena is awakened from stasis, a prisoner of the necromancer’s forces, she has no idea how long she has been incarcerated—or the status of the war. She soon finds herself a personal prisoner of Kaine Ferron, the High Necromancer’s “monster” psychopath who has sadistically killed hundreds for his master. Ordered to recover Helena’s buried memories by any means necessary, the two polar opposites—Helena and Kaine, healer and killer—end up discovering much more as they begin to understand each other through shared trauma. While necromancy is an oft-trod subject in fantasy novels, the author gives it a fresh feel—in large part because of their superb worldbuilding coupled with unforgettable imagery throughout: “[The necromancer] lay reclined upon a throne of bodies. Necrothralls, contorted and twisted together, their limbs transmuted and fused into a chair, moving in synchrony, rising and falling as they breathed in tandem, squeezing and releasing around him…[He] extended his decrepit right hand, overlarge with fingers jointed like spider legs.” Another noteworthy element is the complex dynamic between Helena and Kaine. To say that these two characters shared the gamut of intense emotions would be a vast understatement. Readers will come for the fantasy and stay for the romance.

Although the melodrama sometimes is a bit much, the superb worldbuilding and intricate plotline make this a must-read.

Pub Date: Sept. 23, 2025

ISBN: 9780593972700

Page Count: 1040

Publisher: Del Rey

Review Posted Online: July 17, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 15, 2025

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I, MEDUSA

An engaging, imaginative narrative hampered by its lack of subtlety.

The Medusa myth, reimagined as an Afrocentric, feminist tale with the Gorgon recast as avenging hero.

In mythological Greece, where gods still have a hand in the lives of humans, 17-year-old Medusa lives on an island with her parents, old sea gods who were overthrown at the rise of the Olympians, and her sisters, Euryale and Stheno. The elder sisters dote on Medusa and bond over the care of her “locs...my dearest physical possession.” Their idyll is broken when Euryale is engaged to be married to a cruel demi-god. Medusa intervenes, and a chain of events leads her to a meeting with the goddess Athena, who sees in her intelligence, curiosity, and a useful bit of rage. Athena chooses Medusa for training in Athens to become a priestess at the Parthenon. She joins the other acolytes, a group of teenage girls who bond, bicker, and compete in various challenges for their place at the temple. As an outsider, Medusa is bullied (even in ancient Athens white girls rudely grab a Black girl’s hair) and finds a best friend in Apollonia. She also meets a nameless boy who always seems to be there whenever she is in need; this turns out to be Poseidon, who is grooming the inexplicably naïve Medusa. When he rapes her, Athena finds out and punishes Medusa and her sisters by transforming their locs into snakes. The sisters become Gorgons, and when colonizing men try to claim their island, the killing begins. Telling a story of Black female power through the lens of ancient myth is conceptually appealing, but this novel published as adult fiction reads as though intended for a younger audience.

An engaging, imaginative narrative hampered by its lack of subtlety.

Pub Date: Nov. 18, 2025

ISBN: 9780593733769

Page Count: 336

Publisher: Random House

Review Posted Online: Aug. 16, 2025

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 15, 2025

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