The girl and the stars by Mark Lawrence
The Girl and the Stars is the first book in a new Mark Lawrence series, Book of the Ice. Set in the same world as the Book of the Ancestor novels, this story takes place in the most isolated and inhospitable area of the lands known as Abeth.
When Yaz was born, her parents took her to see two oracles. The first oracle touched her and died. The second oracle prophesised greatness and torment. Yaz has always known she was different. She is not quite as strong as the others in her tribe and she can sense something in the earth, far below, that no one else knows is there. The problem is that for Yaz’s people, the Ictha, different is bad, different is dangerous and in the frozen and bleak landscape of remote Abeth, different will get you killed.
When Yaz’s brother Zeen is set on a path to mortal danger, she unthinkingly follows him. Her mission to rescue him, however, introduces her to a new and treacherous world. Yaz learns that her society and religion is built on the backs of an oppressed class of misfits like herself and it will be up to her to find a way out of the darkness.
Mark Lawrence fans will recognise some similarities to his previous stories: a cold and desolate world, a harsh society and a lone outcast who has no choice but to fight for the survival of herself and those she loves. Unlike Lawrence’s adult series however, The Girl and the Stars is solidly young adult, with the characters acting and behaving as inconsistently and frustratingly as teenagers do. A few other young adult fiction tropes, for example, the love triangle, have also found their way into the plot. Nevertheless, The Girl and the Stars is a captivating beginning to this new series. While the audience does not need to have read the Book of the Ancestor series, prior knowledge of some of the religious and socio-political hierarchies of Abeth makes for easier reading.
Themes: Fantasy, Dystopia, Family, Community, Religion, Oppression, Conflict.
Rose Tabeni