Long Live Evil
Sarah Rees Brennan
The publisher's blurb for Sarah Rees Brennan's Long Live Evil makes it sound like a funny book about a real-world character who slips into a book and finds herself the villain. And it IS that! There were many laugh-out-loud moments, such as this one
Books often described kisses as ‘searing’ which made Rae think of salmon, but characters seemed to enjoy the seared-salmon kisses.
or this
“You saw this horse born,” Marius reminded ... “I told you his bloodline could find their way anywhere. You named him.” “That was a joke,” ... Marius didn’t see what was humorous. He’d thought it was a nice name. ... “So this is my noble steed, Google Maps?”
Rae, our heroine/villainess, is a fantasy book lover, who knows all the plot tropes, not to mention the movies and songs. Plugged into a fantasy novel (à la Inkworld or Thursday Next -- both are referenced in the Acknowledgments) Rae reacts like the thoroughly modern young woman she is, with sense and never-ending incongruity. It never gets old, or at least it did not for me.
But there's another side to this that the blurb barely hints at. Rae, when we meet her, is dying of cancer. There's a lot of pain and anger in her -- there's a reason why, when she's plugged into her sister's favorite fantasy series, she is the villain. Brennan is herself a late-stage cancer survivor. When she writes,
A neighbour had taken Rae aside when news of her diagnosis spread, counselling her to take a blanket to her first appointment. Rae didn’t understand until she found herself on a reclined chair having chemo, every warm organ in her body turning to frozen grapes. She clutched her blanket as the last rope to a warmer world. When she got home, she plunged into a scalding hot bath, but once you knew such cold existed it was impossible to ever really be warm again.
it's obvious she knows what she's talking about.
So, there you have Long Live Evil. It's one laugh after another, and also a portrait of gut-wrenching pain and loneliness. A brilliant mess. It won't be for everyone. But I loved it.
Thanks to NetGalley and Orbit for an advance reader copy of Long Live Evil.
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