Reviews tagging 'Violence'

Wings of Ebony by J. Elle

25 reviews

whysomanysams's review

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adventurous dark emotional reflective tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? It's complicated
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes

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goldengirlbookclub's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? It's complicated

4.25


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britt_writerly's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark emotional hopeful inspiring
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

“Finally.”
THE Caveat: First, all the Black books we have are wins. From Toni Morrison to Tracy Deonn. It’s always a win. The things I say in this review are specifically in reference to 1) ya fantasy 2) a very particular story being called worthy, so it’s truly no shade to any other Black author or book. This is MY truth based on MY life so leave me be. I’m saying this here because I’m not about to put a bunch of qualifiers throughout this review. They’re here. I love a variety of Black stories. We need diversity in the TYPES of stories told. I’ve been waiting for this kind and I’m gonna celebrate it without restraint below.
RATING: 6/5. Yeah, 6, because J.Elle is exceeding the bar and critiquing it all at the same time and you’re just gonna have to stay mad.
Review!!!
So there’s a scene in Wings where Rue rushes back home for reasons I won’t say here to avoid spoilers but it’s tense. She’s scared; you’re scared. She opens The Door and Etta James’s “At Last” drifts out of the crack. That’s how I felt opening this book (well, pressing play on the audiobook ;). I have never read an Urban Contemporary Fantasy that takes up the real conditions of Black life in this country so unflinchingly. I haven’t. I mean not using retellings or stepping away to magical kingdoms but gazing at the harshness of home and making YOUR conflict the STORY’s conflict. This storytelling is elaborate in its simplicity: it’s Black life. Because J. Elle honors that, storying her experiences fantastic, Wings has so many departures and I don’t want this review to be unreasonably long so-- actually I’ve been waiting for this book for 9 years. This review will be as long as I want. Tap out when you need to.
The fact that Rue is offered a magical island-- offered magic itself-- and its like “nah, bruh. I want home” is already a major departure from the norm of what fantasy does. She’s not trying to escape. Her stakes are the stakes of Black people in real life. That is not in any way the norm. This book empowers a Black teen to worldmake in THIS world-- in the AMERICAN SOUTH. That’s. Not. The. Norm.
The focus on community in this book gave me such life. Rue’s so uncompromising with it. She’s loyal to fam and fam is the block. She risks it all for them because they’re WORTHY. This story elevates people who are so often erased. Black Americans ain’t popping. Anywhere-- just our culture and accomplishments. But us? Those of us who don’t know where in Africa or the Caribbean we were stolen from and only have our region, our state, our neighborhood to say that’s where we’re “from.” They don’t call us beautiful. But Wings is gorgeous. The people in it are gorgeous. The sisterhood between Rue and Tasha is gorgeous. Julian’s “You know I got you” is stunning. JULIAN is stunning because let me drop this too: we need more Black boys in fantasy. MORE. Their absence is erasure of frightening proportions. They’re here. ALL the love tensions/interests were with Black boys. BLACK LOVE FOR THE CHILDREN. I love it so. Oh! I love it so.  
Pacing is wonderful. It’s very fast and I had to pace  the reading myself because whooooo J. Elle tried to kill me. My heart almost stopped a couple of times and I was literally curled up in bed like “I need an out or a safeword or something.” She hits you. You’re not about to get comfortable or feel too settled or safe-- and the danger is familiar. Drugs, guns, beatings. Not light sabers or even swords. Most of us have never seen a real life sword. Oh, you have? Just me then, fine. Gun violence, though, is a familiar cross we bear in this country even if it didn’t riddle the communities we grew up in specifically. It’s all we hear about. It’s rocked this country from church shootings to school shootings to gang shootings to police shootings. You get triggered right along with Rue and tremble along with her.
Which leads me to trauma. Rue probably has PTSD from witnessing her mom’s murder but we don’t get a diagnosis, we get the reality of how she lives with it. The paralyzing fear, the random memories, the sudden onset muteness. It’s not spectacular. It’s quiet and easily overlooked from the outside but it’s everything for Rue (and that’s whose perspective we’re made to experience from). Which is another thing: the reader, whoever they are, HAS to get right up and personal with racism. Yeah.
The last thing I’ll talk about is just naming the themes that show up in this book because this review couldn’t possibly get it all. That’s what dissertations are for. Family, community, police brutality, state disinvestment, gun violence, drugs, antiblackness, devaluation of Black life, Black Lives Matter, white fragility, racial allyship, forgiveness, teamwork, fortitude, colonialism, historical deletions, ancestry. I’m sure I’m missing many things that will come to me as I continue to reflect but these are just some that popped out to me immediately. If you’ve gotten nothing else from this review, go read this book. We all need it. 

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marissasbooks's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional tense medium-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

3.75

TW //  death, blood, shooting, violence, racism, genocide (discussed)

I don't think I've ever read a book like this one. And that was part of its appeal because while it had certain elements that made it feel familiar, I never quite knew what to expect or what would happen next and I like stories that keep me guessing!

I will say it wasn't quite what I expected in many ways and I think that affected some of my enjoyment (not to mention the arc wasn't fully formatted), BUT if anything it makes me more excited to read it again because now that I know what to expect I'm curious to see how I feel a second time around. Not to mention I'm just curious to see the final version with it fully formatted and see what may or may not have changed!

After Rue's mom is shot to death, the father she never knew shows up and whisks her away from her sister to Ghizon, a hidden island of magic wielders. Rue is the only half-human there as well as the only Black person besides her father so when she gets the chance to return to Houston she jumps at it even if it means breaking Ghizon's most sacred law not to leave the island. When she finds her sister in danger she breaks another law and touches a human to save her sister from a deadly accident. Soon Rue discovers that her neighborhood is under attack and evidence is mounting that the forces at work are connected back to Ghizon. Rue must learn to embrace her true identity and accept her history in order to wield the full strength of her powers to save her neighborhood and her family.

I loved the characters and the family/friend dynamics which is one of the main reasons I'm excited to read the finished copy of this book and to check out what comes next because the characters are left in a bit of limbo at the end of this book and I need to know what happens to them next! 

Additionally, I enjoyed the magic system because I'm a big fan of systems that have rules/structure but are also flexible and ever-changing whether that be because the characters learn more or because the magic system itself is constantly evolving, and this book and its magic falls into this category. I always had this feeling that there was more to the system and the world that was just waiting to be discovered and I have a strong feeling we will learn more in the next book as Rue uncovers more secrets. 

Finally, I loved the way the author tacked racism, colonization, and the long-lasting effects of both as well as reparations.  It was nuanced but also direct while still fitting in seamlessly with the fantasy worldbuilding and it was amazing to see Rue come into her own and do what was necessary without losing herself in the process and I can't wait to see her develop further.  

Thank you to Denene Millner Books/Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers (and NetGalley) for sharing this arc in exchange for an honest review!

Check out my blog for my full review!

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bookcaptivated's review against another edition

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dark hopeful mysterious tense fast-paced
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? It's complicated
  • Diverse cast of characters? It's complicated
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

4.5


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