In Brannland, small, elite cadres of teenage knights defend the people against the terrifying shadow beasts that roam between gloaming and dawn.
Even though Nora Kemp was identified at 7 as one of the rare immune children eligible to become knights, her father refused to let her join the MacAskill Orders. Then he was killed by a beast. Now 12, Nora finds her life changed forever when she successfully defends her mum against a pair of the giant spiders known as Aranea umbrae and is whisked into service as a knight despite her total lack of training. At Noye’s Hill, the castle that serves as the Orders’ headquarters, Nora displays uncanny raw talent in simulated battle (nurtured in part by her hours of video game play) and is appointed to the Order of the Hawk. The novel’s formula is cozy and familiar: Nora faces initial hostility within her Order but quickly proves herself, for instance. Its brittle worldbuilding (names point to a Brannland that is as robustly multicultural as its analog, Britain, but there’s no sense of a world beyond its borders) and arbitrary plotting (Nora’s sponsor easily allows her to bring forbidden personal items into Noye’s Hill), however, require tolerant readers. Magras’ warm character development and keen sense of pacing help. Nora presents White; her fellow knights are a diverse bunch and include a trans girl who uses hearing aids and a Muslim boy with two hijabi mums.
Absorbing action eases readers over the bumps.
(map) (Fantasy. 10-12)