A Spark of White Fire
2018 • 311 pages

Ratings5

Average rating4.4

15

This book ripped my heart out and stomped on it. I started crying during one of the last scenes, and thought that was bad enough - then the next chapter just DESTROYED ME. It is the first book in a trilogy inspired by the Mahabharata (which I totally want to read now!) - the second book, A House of Rage and Sorrow, isn't due out until September. September! What am I supposed to do until then?!

So. Wow. This is the first book I've read by Mandanna, though The Lost Girl sounds interesting. Given how good this one was, that one has moved higher on my list.

In A Spark of White Fire, we follow Esmae, a girl who was sent away at birth because her mother was told she'd destroy her family. Trying to subvert those kinds of curses never works out well. She's grown up an orphan in a different kingdom, albeit one educated by royal tutors with the local princes, as requested by a goddess. (When the goddess of war asks you to educate an orphan girl with your sons, you do it.) All Esmae really wants is to return to her family; she believes the only way to do that, to claim her place with them, is to help her brother regain his throne. And she thinks she can best do that by winning this contest, earning the unbeatable space ship, and pretending to go join her uncle's family so she has an inside channel to her brother's enemies. It's a little convoluted, but it is something that her brother desperately needs, so it kind of makes sense.

Things unfortunately don't go as planned, and every attempt to escape fate only winds the net tighter.

I loved every character in this book, from the sentient warship Titania (who I wish we'd spent more time with!) to Esmae, her best friend Rama, her cousin Max, her brothers, even her uncle, the usurper king. And the gods. Everyone has such personality. They just leap off the page. Granted, some of them are trying to stab arrows into your heart, but they come to life regardless!

The family dynamics are really what the book is about - no one's truly in the wrong, here, and no one really wants to kill each other, but pride, miscommunication, and bad advice rips them apart. Esmae and Max are doing their best to reconcile the two halves of the family, but the family resists them at every turn.

You can find all my reviews at Goddess in the Stacks.

September 1, 2018Report this review