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Summer in Orcus

T. Kingfisher

5 of 5 Stars

An odd but appealing mix of whimsy and horror, turning portal fantasy tropes on their heads. Baba Yaga, the ultimate witch of Russian folklore, is the quest-giver. Summer's home life is shaped by her mother's severe anxiety. A wolf isn't a threat, but a staunch ally (and a were-creature who turns into a migratory house at night -- you thought Baba Yaga's house was the only one that walked around?). A lich refuses to move on until he finishes his to-read list. Geese are fierce warriors (OK, that part's realistic, except these geese carry spears too), which is fortunate, because 11-year-old Summer herself isn't going to be able to take down the mysterious Queen-In-Chains causing the rot that's slowly destroying Orcus all by herself...or is she?

that part's realistic

It's a bit less cohesive than some of Vernon/Kingfisher's more recent YA/older kids' novels like Illuminations and A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking, partly because it was originally a serial and partly because it's a very kitchen-sink kind of fantasy world where anything goes, from an officious but kind-hearted goofy birds to creepy spider-horses. But it's stuck in my head more than Minor Mage.

Illuminations

A Wizard's Guide to Defensive Baking

Minor Mage

— Kelson Vibber, 2024-09-26

Books

T. Kingfisher

Ursula Vernon

Fantasy

Quest

Portal Fantasy

Magic

Young Adult

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