In a brutal land shaped by myth, two unlikely companions set out on a perilous journey.
While helping his ironsmith father collect swords from a pile of corpses as part of a burial ritual, pale-skinned, blue-eyed, golden-haired village boy Siggi finds Hrafn, a manacled witch-boy with midnight-black hair and skin “darker than anyone’s in Midfjördur.” Hrafn, it turns out, is alive—and when Siggi saves his life, they become bound by Hrafn’s skin magic. Siggi asks for help finding his brother, Arnes, who vanished while seeking answers about the mystery surrounding their late mother, rumored to have been killed by a witch. The duo soon uncover a clue connected to Arnes, and they set off, navigating treacherous mountains and shadowy underground passages where they encounter figures from folklore: huldu, druids, darkwolves, and even a massive, whalelike lyngbakr. Their initially reluctant companionship kindles into a tender, slow-burn romance, offering them rare warmth amid the hardships. Inspired by Icelandic culture and written with dark lyricism, Wallace and Thomas’ collaboration introduces readers to a grim yet entrancing world in which beauty and terror coexist. Though the pacing occasionally drags under the richly textured worldbuilding and mythological exposition, readers drawn to folklore-laced fantasy and hard-won romance with sharp banter will find much to savor here.
A dark, haunting fantasy in which magic binds hearts as tightly as it binds fates.
(map) (Fantasy. 14-18)