A girl journeys to save her family and her home.
Thirteen-year-old Olia loves her family’s ramble-shamble wooden castle. She loves that they have called Castle Mila home for the past 500 years, from her royal ancestors to the present day in which her parents are carpenters. And she loves that she and her family—Papa, Mama, baby sister, and Babusya—care for it now. When an unexpected storm threatens Castle Mila, Babusya reveals that magic is attempting to break free from the castle’s domes and that only Olia can prevent further damage. Aided by the castle’s domovoi, a foxlike spirit named Feliks, Olia has less than one day to journey through the Land of Forbidden Magic, cut off the beard of an evil wizard, and restore the balance of magic. Along the way she meets myriad magical creatures from Slavic lore and learns that nothing—from her own abilities to the Land of Forgotten Magic to her family’s legacy—is what it seemed. Although in keeping with the narrative’s fairy-tale influences, largely unanswered worldbuilding questions—for example, why is Olia the only one who can save Castle Mila?—may leave readers feeling that key aspects of the plot are underdeveloped and contrived. The dialogue sometimes feels self-conscious, but Olia’s first-person narration is earnest, and readers will root for her. The human cast reads as default White.
A Slavic-inspired fantasy that may appeal to fans of fairy tales.
(glossary) (Fantasy. 8-12)