Next book

MONKEY WARS

Powerful and disturbing.

A real-life conflict between rival monkey species in Kolkata becomes a dark, violent fable of totalitarianism and resistance.

Mico is a very young monkey when humans entice his langur troop into chasing the disruptive rhesus out of the city; even so, he knows that this victory is more gruesome than glorious. When the young rhesus Papina sneaks back to discover her father's fate, the two forge an instantaneous bond. Soon, clever, imaginative Mico ascends the langur hierarchy while secretly feeding information to Papina and the other rhesus refugees. As Tyrell, the new langur dictator, grows ever more ambitious, bloodthirsty and paranoid, Mico finds it increasingly difficult to juggle his loyalty to his tribe and his duty to his conscience. With its pomp, pageantry and brutally effective terror tactics, its ghettos and genocide, the langur tyranny deliberately evokes the Nazi regime. As a Hitler analog, Tyrell’s frothing villainy overshadows his charisma, but the allure of power—even for the most conscientious—is portrayed with frightening effectiveness. The straightforward prose has a disconcerting tendency to switch viewpoint midscene, yet it also ratchets up the suspense and dread with unrelenting urgency, compelling readers to keep the pages turning. Graphic and implacably grim, the tale does not shy away from the toll oppression exacts from victims, perpetrators, collaborators and bystanders alike.

Powerful and disturbing. (Animal fantasy. 14 & up)

Pub Date: Jan. 6, 2015

ISBN: 978-0-385-74441-6

Page Count: 416

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: Oct. 21, 2014

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 1, 2014

Next book

A QUEEN OF GILDED HORNS

From the River of Royal Blood series , Vol. 2

A strong and satisfying conclusion.

Princess Eva returns in this follow-up to the duology that started with A River of Royal Blood (2019).

Picking up where the last book left off, Eva’s on the run from her ruthless queen mother, with her friends, guards, and kidnapped sister and rival heir, Isa, in tow. As Eva continues to struggle with the knowledge that to become queen she must kill Isa—or be killed herself—she also contemplates what it means that both of her parents have lied to her (in very different ways). New revelations, realizations, and relationships have tempered Eva’s privileged upbringing, shaking her foundations, and her growth is apparent. Though she grapples with multiple problems—and further surprises about herself—Eva chooses to focus on the grave injustices her human ancestors have visited on her khimaer people, and she creates a plan of action. Chapters alternate between Eva’s first-person perspective and those of Isa and a few other secondary characters (told in the third person). Themes of parental disappointment and abuse, sibling bonds, and speciesism are strongly developed and well explored. Joy’s writing is exemplary; a strong plot, even pacing, and character growth (not only Eva’s) all lead up to an ending that should satisfy even the pickiest readers. Eva and many secondary characters are brown-skinned while Isa is light brown and some others are lighter skinned.

A strong and satisfying conclusion. (map) (Fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: March 16, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-525-51861-7

Page Count: 368

Publisher: Putnam

Review Posted Online: Dec. 21, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2021

Next book

MASTER OF ONE

A captivating and satisfying queer fantasy.

Teenage heroes uncover fae secrets and fight the forces of evil.

Rags is a skilled thief chosen to break into an elaborately guarded fae ruin. Inside, he awakens a handsome, tattooed fae warrior who vows to protect him, and Rags is thrust unwittingly into adventure. Soon the cast expands to an ensemble of six heroes and a diverse supporting cast of friends and foes. The team seeks to assemble the pieces of an ancient fae weapon that look like giant silver animals. They also have to outsmart the evil sorcerer Morien, aid the Resistance against the queen, and discover the terrible secret at the heart of the court. Meanwhile, Rags is trying to figure out his own feelings toward the fae warrior Shining Talon. Jones and Bennett play the hits—magical companion animals, ethereal magic warriors, an evil queen—yet do so with skill, excitement, and a unique aesthetic. This world of court intrigue and immortal fae with skin covered in black tattoos feels at once comfortably familiar and intriguingly new. By the end, readers will be itching for more. Of the heroes, four are White, one is brown-skinned, and one is a fantasy race with golden skin and black hair. One has a disability, not handled with great sensitivity—he is “familiar with curses, having been born one to his mother,” readers are told, and his arm and leg are repeatedly described as “withered”; another is transgender.

A captivating and satisfying queer fantasy. (pronunciation guide) (Fantasy. 14-18)

Pub Date: Nov. 10, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-06-294144-2

Page Count: 544

Publisher: HarperTeen

Review Posted Online: Aug. 13, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2020

Close Quickview