Kirkus Reviews QR Code
CHILDREN OF VIRTUE AND VENGEANCE by Tomi Adeyemi

CHILDREN OF VIRTUE AND VENGEANCE

From the Legacy of Orisha series, volume 2

by Tomi Adeyemi

Pub Date: Dec. 3rd, 2019
ISBN: 978-1-250-17099-6
Publisher: Henry Holt

In this follow-up to Children of Blood and Bone(2018), Zélie and company are back, and the future of Orïsha hangs in the balance.

Zélie, now a maji Reaper, has achieved her goal and brought magic back to Orïsha, but at great cost. Grief and loss are strong themes throughout the book, compounded by guilt for Zélie, who feels responsible for her father’s death. Zélie and her older brother, Tzain, try to help Princess Amari ascend the throne, believing her family dead—but Queen Nehanda, Amari’s mother, is very much alive and more formidable than they could imagine. The trio join the Iyika, a band of rebel maji working to protect their persecuted people from threats new and old. Though the characters’ trauma reads as real and understandable, their decisions don’t always feel sensible or logical, often stemming from a lack of communication or forethought, which may leave readers frustrated. Though still commendable for its detailed worldbuilding, with an ending compelling enough to keep fans interested in the next installment, much of the book feels like navigating minefields of characters’ ill-advised decisions. All characters are black except for a secondary character with silky black hair, tan skin, and gray eyes “like teardrops.”

Second installments in trilogies sometimes slump—here’s hoping the third book is a return to the vibrancy of the first.

(Fantasy. 14-18)