Reviews

The Unkindest Tide by Seanan McGuire

pyrocat's review against another edition

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adventurous emotional mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? No

5.0

needleclicker's review

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adventurous emotional mysterious fast-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Plot
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.5

kathydavie's review against another edition

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4.0

Thirteenth in the October Daye urban fantasy series and revolving around a changeling knight with her chosen family. The focus is on the Luidaeg and the debt she's calling in on the Selkies and on Toby.

My Take
McGuire provides quite a bit of background on what's happened in the series. But I gotta tell ya, it mostly made me want to re-read the entire series for a better understanding of what's going on and of character interactions. Sure, McGuire uses first person protagonist point-of-view from Toby's perspective, and we get that grounding in Faerie Law and how harsh it is, but it doesn't explain the details around the Selkie curse and why the Luidaeg has to go through with its ending. The twists and turns of how it has to end are enough to drive a reader insane. Well, me at least.

It does seem a hard punishment for today's Selkies. Or not. It might feel even harder if McGuire had been plainer about how ending the Selkies (or not!?!?) will affect the whole clan. I do get Toby's idea, but I don't see how another seven years is going to make a difference... And why would every Selkie have to die anyway?

Okay, no. The whole temptation scene Toby goes through felt like a filler.

I'm irked with Torin. No, I lie. I despise the cheating, conniving, sniveling, weak-minded wretch. Even more, the whole scenario with Dianda being arrested as a traitor made no sense. As for Pete's judgment on Torin...? I am so confused as to how this is gonna be so bad.

The Merrow have an odd way of conducting war. I can see where it reduces the carnage, but, oy. As for why McGuire tossed this side story in, I guess she needed more filler.

Those nursery rhyming spells crack me up.

I know, I know, I shouldn't say it. But I don't like Gillian. She's a spoiled little shit who thinks she knows it all. I know, I know. She's still a teenager and they do "know it all". But still. That whole scene with Toby, Torin, and Gillian had me confused. How was Toby "doing this for Gillian"? And this, this is when Gillian calls Toby "mom"?

I dunno. I did not enjoy this story for all the confusion running rampant in it. Sure, I'm pleased we get a, sort of, resolution to the whole Roane thing, but it's not really resolved in my mind.

The Story
The Selkies have been a stopgap. A way to keep the Roane bloodline alive. But no more. The Selkies will end. No more will they be trapped between, never seeing their grandchildren born. There will be. No. More.

Then there are those who don't want the Roane to return.

Yet, they must fix what has been broken, for nothing can be broken forever and stay stable.

The Characters
A complete character list can be found on the review at KD Did It.com.

Sir October "Toby" Christine Daye, Knight of Lost Words, is a changeling knight, a hero, for the fae who works as a private detective to pay the bills. (Karen calls her "Auntie Birdie".) She's finally learned that she's Dóchas Sidhe, a bloodworker. Cagney and Lacy are Toby's elderly Siamese cats. Spike is Toby's rose goblin. Quentin Sollys, a Daoine Sidhe, is Toby's sworn squire and in blind fosterage — no one is supposed to know he's the Crown Prince of the Westlands, destined to be High King of North America. Penthea is Quentin's sister in Toronto.

Engaged to marry Toby, Tybalt, the former King of Dreaming Cats, a.k.a., Rand, is Cait Sidhe with access to the Shadow Roads, secret corridors and connections between the dark places of the world. He and Jazz are still recovering from events in The Brightest Fell, 11. Anne had been Tybalt's first wife, a human (who died in childbirth in the early 1900s). Raj is Tybalt's heir and Quentin's best friend since events in An Artificial Night, 3. Ginerva, a Princess of Cats from the Court of Whispering Cats (Night and Silence, 12), is standing in as regent until Raj is old enough to take the throne.

May Daye is/was Toby's Fetch (An Artificial Night) who lives in Toby's Victorian with her traumatized girlfriend, Jazz, a Raven-maid who runs a secondhand shop in Berkeley.

Leucothea is...
...the Pacific Ocean and ruled by Queen Palatyne who turns a blind eye to the Duchy of Ships.

The Duchy of Ships is...
...an island with a lighthouse with ships of all kinds moored together to form an even bigger island, a safe harbor for people with nowhere else to go. It's ruled by Captain Pete, a.k.a., Amphitrite, Firstborn daughter of Titania and Oberon, Mother of the Merrow, and the Luidaeg's half-sister. Rodrick is a first mate and mans the Jackdaw, one of the ships that pass between coastal kingdoms and the ducal waters as floating knowes. The duchy's inhabitants include Cephali who are half octopus, Sirens, Asrai, Selkies, and more.

Saltmist is...
...an Undersea duchy ruled by Duchess Dianda Lorden, a Merrow, who is mated to Patrick, an air-breathing Daoine Sidhe, Baron Twycross. Peter is their son and Dianda's heir. They owe loyalty to Palatyne. Helmi and Kirsi are Cephali guards. Mary is a Roane woman with a gift of prophecy who is part of Dianda's court.

Torin is Dianda's younger brother and heir to the Duchy of Bluefish. He's also Amphitrite's great-great-grandson.

The Selkies were...
...born in the slaughter of the sweet and kind Roane, the children of "cousin Annie", stormsingers who saw the future in the tides. Due to the Luidaeg's spell, Selkies are a people blended of fae and human, and they rule themselves. The five major North American clans include the drunken Elizabeth "Liz" Ryan's Roan Rathad where Baron Aberforth is the local regent, Mathias Lefebvre's Lefebvre clan is from the waters off the Kingdom of Beacon's Home, an east coast Canadian kingdom near Halifax, Isla Chase of Belle Fleuve, Joan O'Connell represents Tremont, and Claude Anthony who represents Sweet Water.

Diva is Liz's daughter. René O'Dell Lefebvre, a schoolteacher, is married to Mathias. Connor O'Dell, a Selkie diplomat assigned to Shadowed Hills and who had been Toby's lover after his marriage ended (One Salt Sea, 5), had been René's second cousin. Isla had been René's sister. Moving Day is, I think, the day the Selkies will arrive at the Duchy of Ships. The Convocation of Consequences is when the Selkies must pay the piper.

Goldengreen is...
...the knowe Toby gave to Dean Lorden, Count Goldengreen (One Salt Sea), and one of Dianda and Patrick's two sons. (He's also Quentin's boyfriend.) Marcia is the changeling seneschal who steers him away from the nastier dangers of his position.

Stacy and Mitch Brown have five children, who include Cassandra and Karen, who is an oneiromancer. Danny McReady is a Bridge Troll who drives a taxicab and is a friend of Toby's.

Miranda Marks is married to Toby's ex-fiancé, Cliff Marks, and Toby's daughter, Gillian, calls her mother (Night and Silence, 12). And Gillian currently wears a Selkie skin to keep her alive.

Windermere in the Mists is...
…the Faerie kingdom in San Francisco ruled by the true Queen of the Mists, Arden Windermere, a Tuatha de Dannan (Chimes at Midnight, 7). Nolan is Arden's recently awakened brother and Crown Prince of the Mists. Cassandra Brown is Stacy’s oldest daughter, an aeromancer with a gift for foretelling, who works for Arden.

Shadowed Hills is...
...a duchy ruled by Sylvester Torquill, Toby’s uncle and liege, and a Daoine Sidhe. Luna, a Blodynbryd, is Sylvester's duchess. Sir Etienne is Sylvester's seneschal. Chelsea is Sir Etienne's daughter (Ashes of Honor, 6). Simon Torquill, Sylvester's brother, had been Toby's stepfather.

Tamed Lightning is…
...back to being ruled by Countess January O’Leary, Simon and Sylvester’s niece (Night and Silence, 12). April O'Leary, the former countess and a cyber-dryad (A Local Habitation, 2), is January's daughter.

Faerie Background
Oberon is king of the fae with two queens, Titania and Maeve, which resulted in the Divided Courts. Each has/had a different magic specialty. Oberon's is blood, which is memory and theft; his descendants are the Tuatha de Dannan. Dóchas Sidhe, children of the Last Ride, are two generations removed from Oberon and are a result of the Firstborn Amandine having a baby with a human. Oberon's Law states that purebloods may not kill other purebloods. Changelings and humans are fair game.

Titania is flower, which is illusions and wards; her descendants are the Doaine Sidhe through their Firstborn Evening Winterrose, a.k.a., Eira Rosynhwyr, which makes Evening the Luidaeg's half-sister (Rosemary and Rue).

Maeve is water, which is transformation and healing; the Luidaeg, a.k.a., the sea witch, is Maeve's oldest surviving child and formally known as Antigone of Albany. She's also the mother of the Roane who were destroyed. Poppy became Aes Sidhe when she gave up being a pixie in The Brightest Fell, 11, and now she's the Luidaeg's apprentice.

Toby's mother is Amandine the Liar, a disdained Firstborn of Oberon. August is Amandine's oldest daughter. It was the five-hundred-plus-year-old Janet Carter who caused Faerie to break, and she's Toby's grandmother.

The Cover and Title
The cover is a range of oranges and browns with a sunset sky behind the close-up of Toby, her hair flying in the breeze, revealing the tip of her pointy ear, and wearing her black leather jacket, at the side of the old wooden sailing ship. An info blurb is at the top in white with the embossed author's name in white below that. To the right of Toby's shoulder is the series info in white. Below the ship's rail is the title in a embossed cracked and raggedy yellow. A deep orange circular badge notes, in yellow, that there's a novella at the end of the story.

The title truly is The Unkindest Tide, for no one had expected the Luidaeg to call in the Selkies' debt nor for it to result in murder.

Merged review:

A short story, 13.1, in the October Daye urban fantasy series based in the San Francisco-Bay Area and revolving around a changeling knight errant and her friends and chosen family. The focus is on Raj, Tybalt's heir. It's been an hour since Tybalt and Toby set sail for the Duchy of Ships in The Unkindest Tide, 13.

It's currently found in the back of The Unkindest Tide.

My Take
McGuire uses a first person protagonist point-of-view from Raj's perspective, which allows us to perceive first-hand the lessons Raj is learning about kingship.

Ooh, Toby has no idea the hole she could have been in with Raj! Bad enough that Peter Lorden has his own, similar, dreams!!

It's cute that Raj and Ginerva are teaching each other; she's supervising him while he's teaching her the more delicate side of magic.

The primary theme in "Hope is Swift" is Raj having to become king so much sooner than he'd thought and all the fallout he's now dealing with because of it. Part of his questioning is the perceptions of the Daoine Sidhe and why the Cait Sidhe should strive so hard to emulate them.

There are different rules about violence for the Cait Sidhe, particularly when it comes to one king succeeding another. Luckily for Raj, he's considered "orphaned".

McGuire provides some back story on Helen's and Raj's "misadventures" in Blind Michael's lands. I definitely have to go back and re-read this series!

The conflict of the story is Raj's love (and fears) for Helen, which combine with his desire for independence, all of which lead to Raj's trauma. There is one good side to this disaster, as Raj learns that the Court of Cats could be doing so much more to help. Nor is it just the cats who need more help.

And it all comes down to a question of honor, and I absolutely love when Raj realizes he's already a hero.

The Story
It's not fair. Raj isn't ready for this. He thought he had years left, and now everyone is treating him like he's fragile.

He wants his independence and freedom...until he learns better.

The Characters
Rajiv "Raj" is the Crown Prince of the Court of Dreaming Cats, adopted as heir by Uncle Tybalt, the former king of the Dreaming Cats, who stepped down after events in Night and Silence, 12. He'll need a new name, as "Tybalt" is his king name. Raj's mother hadn't had enough power to transform from her cat shape and has died. His father, Samson, tried to lead a revolt against Tybalt (Ashes of Honor, 6).

Raj's friends can only be outside the Court and include Helen; Dean Lorden, Count of Goldengreen; Quentin Sollys, Sir Toby's squire; and, Chelsea, Sir Etienne's daughter, who loves medical forensics TV series.

The terrified Helen is Raj's half-Hob girlfriend who loves to sew and lives near the Castro neighborhood (An Artificial Night, 3). Her father, Willis, is a Hob, who tolerates Raj's visits. Tina had been Helen's human mother, the woman Willis had loved.

The Court of Dreaming Cats is...
...based in San Francisco. Cal is somehow a they, but he seems to be a single Cait Sidhe. Lady Ginerva, a Princess of Cats from the Court of Whispering Cats (Night and Silence), is standing in as regent until Raj is old enough to take the throne.

Stacy Brown is the "thin-blood" to whom Cal refers, a one-quarter changeling who is best friends with Toby. Danny McReady is a Bridge Troll who drives a taxi and is another friend of Toby's. April O'Leary is a cyber-Dryad and daughter of Countess January O'Leary of Tamed Lightning. Ellyllon is a healer at the Court of Shadowed Hills. Dr Walther Davies teaches at UC-Berkeley and is a Tylwyth Teg.

The Court of Whispering Cats is...
...based in the Kingdom of Silences and is ruled by Jolgeir, Ginerva's father. Her mother is human, and they have/had three changeling daughters who are now all Fae, thanks to Toby (Night and Silence).

The Court of Golden Cats is...
...based in Berkeley where Shade, a Blue Point Siamese, is queen.

Dr Bailey is one of the veterinarians. Blind Michael had made a habit of kidnapping children for his Hunts in An Artificial Night.

priya_amrev's review against another edition

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3.0

Okay look. I love Tybalt. It at least I did. But recently all he’s become are occasional pithy comments, anger on behalf of Toby, and then kind of pathetic insecurity over her.

Or maybe it’s just my ex coloring my perceptions.

Okay I think it was my ex

klparmley's review against another edition

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4.0

The Sea With may be my favorite character in this series.

katieinca's review against another edition

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5.0

Loved the Duchy of Ships - before we've either had land or underwater, but being AT sea while not IN it was fun. Also loved Pete, in retrospect maybe less for herself and more because of who she brought out in Dianda and the Ludaieg. Loved the solution found to the ominous fate we've been warned about for several books. Got annoyed at the murder mystery plot for once, I think mostly because the villian was just annoying.
Also, what the HECK is Marcia's deal?

accidentalspaceexplorer's review against another edition

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4.75

I'm starting to have some issues with the pacing as we get on into the series. I know that there are a *lot* of side characters, but I wish that instead of spending time with them in novellas they just showed up in the actual book more. I did love the bits with the Luideag, she's my favorite.

bjayfogg's review against another edition

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adventurous dark emotional funny mysterious tense medium-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

4.5

sunshine4you's review against another edition

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adventurous challenging dark tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

mkoehn's review against another edition

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

5.0