“A woman married. Or she became a nun. Or she died. That was what being a woman meant. What, then, was she?”
Dates read: December 11-15, 2017
Rating: 9/10
Sometimes I find myself longingly wondering what life would be like as a man, even just for a while. I’d be able to walk the dog when it’s dark without feeling apprehensive. No one would question my ambition. No one would assume that I’m my boss’s side piece (this was an actual thing that happened at my lawyer job, not this one thank goodness). I wouldn’t have to worry about crossing my legs at the ankle instead of the knee. No one would shout out commentary about my appearance at me. Must be nice!
And I live in a time that’s among the freest and safest for women there’s ever been! It’s no wonder that Vasya, heroine of Katherine Arden’s The Girl in the Tower, finds herself forced into disguise as a man in order to move freely and safely through her medieval Russian world. The book picks up more or less right where The Bear and the Nightingale left off…Vasya has fled the rural village she grew up in after her father was killed and she herself was labeled a witch. Knowing full well what that means for her life expectancy, she sets out to explore the world, ignoring the advice of frost demon Morozko who warns her that the world is not kind to young women alone. She discovers very quickly that he is correct, and presents herself thereafter as a boy…it helps that her nickname, Vasya, like many Russian nicknames, is gender neutral and could therefore stand for Vasily as well as Vasilisa.
In pursuit of a mysterious group of bandits that has been stealing children, Vasya finds herself unexpectedly reunited with her brother Sasha and the Crown Prince of Moscow to whom he is sworn in service, Dmitrii. When she gets back to Moscow with them, she’s also reconnected with her older sister Olga, now the wife of an important nobleman, and meets Olga’s daughter, Marya, who seems to share Vasya’s unusual ability of seeing things beyond the ordinary. Vasya’s trying to keep her masculine identity intact until she can get on her way while also enjoying the ability to express her naturally bold personality…and then, of course, disaster strikes and the family finds themselves fighting supernatural forces to stay alive.
The Bear and the Nightingale was one of my favorite reads of 2017, and this sequel (the second in a trilogy) did not disappoint. I will say that I’d recommend reading it shortly after the first book, or while it’s still relatively fresh in your mind…there’s very little of the kind of “catching the reader up” exposition that many sequels have, and I wish I’d known that going in because I’d read the first nearly a year prior so the details were a little fuzzy. But the magic is still there! Arden’s prose and storytelling remain deft, she expands further into the realm of Slavic folklore, and I love how she grows the seeds of romance she planted in The Bear and The Nightingale between Vasya and Morozko. I found myself rooting for them even though Arden never lets you forget the inherent power imbalance between an immortal creature and a teenage girl. It’s refreshing to see a romantic plotline with a young woman who won’t apologize for her desire to finish becoming herself.
While there are many books I read that I enjoy, it’s pretty rare that something really grabs me and keeps me up late at night and makes me want to buy extra copies to give to people and force them to read it (honestly, I have a really hard time recommending books to people in real life because so much about whether a person will enjoy a book depends on taste). This series makes it into that group, for me. They’re just flat-out great storytelling. I can’t wait to get my hands on the final book in the trilogy, and I’d highly recommend the Winternight books to all readers!
One year ago, I was reading: Life After Life (review to come)
Two years ago, I was reading: Stoner
Three years ago, I was reading: The Last One