Thursday, February 3, 2022

Book Review - Leigh Bardugo's Siege and Storm

Siege and Storm by Leigh Bardugo
Published by: Henry Holt and Co.
Publication Date: June 4th, 2013
Format: Hardcover, 448 Pages
Rating: ★★★★★
To Buy (Different edition then one reviewed)

Alina and Mal barely escaped the Darkling in the fold of darkness and death that divides Ravka. Alina wrested back control of her power from the Darkling, but not before a deadly price was paid. So many lives lost on that sand skiff. Hiding out halfway around the world Alina is haunted by what happened and the choices she has made. Sickening, she longs to use her powers and the ill gotten amplifier but it is too risky. She has turned her back on Ravka, hoping for a new life with Mal and that the rumors of the Darkling's continued existence are a lie. But they cannot hide forever. The Darkling finds them across the True Sea. He has plans for Alina and disturbing new powers of his own. He isn't just manipulating the world around him, he is creating something new, he is using the darkest of magics. He is dabbling in the forbidden. Instead of taking his captives back to Ravka the Darkling takes them far north on the hunt for another creature out of fairy tale and myth. A second forbidden amplifier for Alina's powers. Though little does the Darkling know that there are other people who also have plans for Alina. Plans that she can't ignore. Impossible you might say, but really you probably mean improbable. Alina can no longer turn her back on her country's suffering as the Grisha are ostracized and Ravka is divided. She agrees to return and lead the second army in the place of the Darkling with the sole purpose of his downfall. Yet are her new powers and believed divinity a match for the Darkling? Or does she need more power in order to succeed? The fact remains that the Darkling is the only one who understands what she is going through and therefore the only one she can turn to. A fact born out the more removed she feels from the other Grisha and in particular from Mal. But those are things that can wait, the battle with the Darkling is coming. Can she survive it in tact or will the power coursing through her corrupt her like it did the Darkling?

In the battle of good versus evil there always comes a time when the wiser action is to run. To regroup and come back hopefully stronger than before. While necessary, this can sometimes lead to boring storytelling. The suffering, the privations, the hardships, the hope of news that perhaps the luck of the enemy is running out. These stories are never my favorite. After the epic showdown in the fold between Alina and the Darkling Bardugo went in an unexpected direction. The Darkling forces Alina and Mal out of hiding almost immediately. Alina and Mal could go on the offensive while preparing a strong defense without us waiting until the next volume. A defense that might involve fairy tales. Bardugo has tapped into the vein of Russian folktales and brought out what modernization and progress mean to our shared past. In Siege and Storm the words of the Darkling that the time of the Grisha is coming to a close is not only explored but expanded on. There is this interesting dynamic of past versus future, with the old ways dying off. The future doesn't belong to Tsars and magic and fairy tales, but to iron and steel and guns. Yes, we see glimpses that perhaps, just maybe, there could be a world where they could coexist, feeding each other, but that seems like the true fairy tale. Yet what strikes me most is that while Ravka might possibly be saved by these modern military advancements, their only true hope lies with Alina. Alina isn't a creature of the modern world, she is of the old world. She is of the time when maps still bore legends that said beyond here there be monsters. She thinks in fairy stories of the too-clever fox. The third amplifier she seeks is that of the fire bird, a creature of myth that isn't just in one or two stories, but in every story of Ravka. A fairy tale holds the key to the future, and that is a world that I want to live in. A world where stories are real.

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