This sequel to Ravensong (2023), which picks up where its predecessor left off, concludes the Irish mythology–inspired duology.
Neve and her girlfriend, Alexandria, have made it back to Newgrange Harbor, Massachusetts, after traveling through the Gate that Neve has spent her life protecting from the monsters that try to pass through it. But Aodh, her antagonistic cousin, has followed her—and even worse, her sisters are stuck on the other side. Neve isn’t supposed to get back any memories of her previous lives until she turns 18, but they’ve started trickling in anyway, making her more confused than ever about whom to trust and why the Gate was created in the first place. The highly original worldbuilding that stood out in the first book is present here, but this story is lacking in tension and significant character growth. For most of the novel, the major conflict centers on Neve’s confused memories, an element that quickly becomes repetitive and frustrating. Many chapters smartly end with mini cliffhangers, which entice readers to keep going, but they wind up feeling like false alarms as the story continues to meander without much development all the way to the underwhelming ending. There is some delightfully gross imagery throughout and a few cute moments between Neve and Alexandria, who are cued white, but there is little, plot-wise, for readers to invest in.
A disappointing finish to what started off as a promising series.
(Fantasy. 13-18)