Calla struggles with her cursed luck as the Fates turn against her.
In Illustros, a land of witches, Valkyries, sirens, and other fantastical creatures, Calliope Rosewood hides her cursed Siphon magic, having already fled her home numerous times out of fear of discovery. Not only must Calla glamour her mismatched Siphon eyes, one violet and one honey colored, but even when they were in a relationship she kept some distance from Ezra, lest he discover the unlucky Rolls of Fate from Witch’s Dice magically tattooed onto her arm. After a gambling bet goes wrong and Calla rolls another cursed six, making her the Blood Warrior for the Fates, she goes on a quest to the Neverending Forest to find the Witch Eater who can erase her rolls. She’s accompanied by Ezra and his brother, Gideon; Onyx witches Kestrel and Caspian; and her friends, siren Delphine and Rouge witch Hannah. While the exploration of powerful godly Fates and the possibility of self-determination are intriguing, the book gets bogged down in clichés, clunky worldbuilding, and awkward descriptions of fight scenes. Calla’s witty narration and ongoing friendships with Delphine and Hannah are positive and empowering, but they become overwhelmed by complicated relationship drama. Calla’s internal battle between her socially acceptable Rouge magic and suppressed Siphon powers is well depicted, covering the importance of self-acceptance as well as the limitations of binary frameworks. Calla reads White; the remaining cast mostly appears fantasy diverse.
An intriguing premise that fails to soar.
(map) (Fantasy. 12-17)