Picking up where she left off in Draw Down the Moon (2024), Wren sets off on a quest with two friends, trying to prove her innocence and reveal the true source of evil on Moon Isle.
On the same night her best friend was killed, Wren Nightingale barely escaped Academia de la Luna with her faithful Air Elemental. She was accused of being changed by “evil Magicks,” and now she’s deemed a traitor and a murderer by Celeste, the Lunar Council’s manipulative leader. Worse, Lee Young, her most trusted friend and the boy she loves, is standing with Celeste. Wren embarks on a journey through the Realm of Elementals with her friends, Lily Weatherford (a wealthy Leo moon whose power lies in understanding and shaping others’ emotions) and Ruby Nakamura (a nonbinary Scorpio moon who’s “super strong” and “super fast”), along with her Elemental, Viento, who’s tried to protect her since her first day on Moon Isle. Wren’s friends’ belief in and willingness to help her, despite rumors spread by those in power, ground the book’s themes of loyalty and standing up against evil. Told in Wren’s and Lee’s alternating first-person points of view, this slow-moving story with limited emotional depth and an incomplete ending takes the form of an archetypal hero’s journey, with plenty of obstacles and several unexpected helpers. The earlier volume established Wren as white and Lee as Black.
A creative but meandering duology closer that leaves too many loose ends.
(Fantasy. 12-18)