Book Review: The Bear and the Nightingale
Posted: Fri Nov 30, 2018 11:07 pm
Title of the book: The Bear and the Nightingale
Authors: Katherine Arden
Series: Winternight Trilogy (#1)
Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Historical Fiction
Summary and evaluation:
The Bear and the Nightingale is by far my favourite book of 2018 so far!
I didn’t expect it to love this story half as much as I ended up doing. I chose it on a bit of a whim (honestly, the cover was pretty and the brief mention of an ice demon somewhere caught my interest) but I’m so glad I did. The book is now making the rounds through my family and I’m recommending it to everyone I can!
This is a wonderful fantasy story set in the northern wilderness of Russia, where the equally wild young Vaysa listens to her grandmother tell fairy tales by the fire. But as Vasya grows, the fairy tales only become more real and soon she finds herself torn between the duties of two entirely different worlds. As midwinter approaches once again, Vasya will have to make a choice; become the woman and daughter her people expect of her or a warrior for the spirit world, fighting shoulder to shoulder with the King of Winter himself.
The pace of this book was wonderful. Suspense built steadily as the tensions in the characters (and the weather) rose but it was encapsulating from the very beginning. Instead of feeling as though Arden was fighting to keep my interest, my interest was very naturally caught and I didn’t want to put the book down. Neither could I seem to only read a few pages at time as every occasion I started reading again, the story enveloped me anew. I became invested in the feisty, odd Vasya and anticipated her interactions with the different spirits derived from Russian folklore (the Domovoi – a gentle little bearded man who lived in the oven and guarded the house, emerging occasionally to mend clothes, was a personal favourite).
I was only a few chapters in when I went ahead and bought the sequel, ‘The Girl in the Tower’. I feel like I’ve seen Vasya grow up in this book and now I can’t wait to see how far she’ll go
Authors: Katherine Arden
Series: Winternight Trilogy (#1)
Genres: Fantasy, Fiction, Historical Fiction
Summary and evaluation:
The Bear and the Nightingale is by far my favourite book of 2018 so far!
I didn’t expect it to love this story half as much as I ended up doing. I chose it on a bit of a whim (honestly, the cover was pretty and the brief mention of an ice demon somewhere caught my interest) but I’m so glad I did. The book is now making the rounds through my family and I’m recommending it to everyone I can!
This is a wonderful fantasy story set in the northern wilderness of Russia, where the equally wild young Vaysa listens to her grandmother tell fairy tales by the fire. But as Vasya grows, the fairy tales only become more real and soon she finds herself torn between the duties of two entirely different worlds. As midwinter approaches once again, Vasya will have to make a choice; become the woman and daughter her people expect of her or a warrior for the spirit world, fighting shoulder to shoulder with the King of Winter himself.
The pace of this book was wonderful. Suspense built steadily as the tensions in the characters (and the weather) rose but it was encapsulating from the very beginning. Instead of feeling as though Arden was fighting to keep my interest, my interest was very naturally caught and I didn’t want to put the book down. Neither could I seem to only read a few pages at time as every occasion I started reading again, the story enveloped me anew. I became invested in the feisty, odd Vasya and anticipated her interactions with the different spirits derived from Russian folklore (the Domovoi – a gentle little bearded man who lived in the oven and guarded the house, emerging occasionally to mend clothes, was a personal favourite).
I was only a few chapters in when I went ahead and bought the sequel, ‘The Girl in the Tower’. I feel like I’ve seen Vasya grow up in this book and now I can’t wait to see how far she’ll go