Reviews tagging 'Sexual assault'

The Darkangel Trilogy by Meredith Ann Pierce

1 review

nannahnannah's review

Go to review page

5.0

This book/trilogy is incredibly hard for me, personally, to rate and review with an unbiased mind because it's been my favorite since grade school. I don't even have the dust jacket cover anymore, and the book itself is falling apart--but it still has my "this book belongs to ____" written in sharpie (wince!) in huge third-grade block caps in the back cover. It's really that old to me. Then again this 3-in-1 book was published in 1990, and the first novel of the trilogy in 1982.

But I've finally given it enough time to read it that I didn't know every single event (and word! -- I remember writing down every single word I didn't know to look it up). I'm not let down, but I am a bit more critical, at least.

This is the entire Darkangel Trilogy: The Darkangel, A Gathering of Gargoyles, and The Pearl of the Soul of the World in one novel.

When Aeriel's mistress gets taken by the Darkangel (a vampyre who drinks souls, not blood), she has no choice but to follow and try to kill him. Instead, she becomes the weaver for the Darkangel's wives, nothing more than wraiths now and who need special clothing. During her stay at the Darkangel's castle, she learns he's not a complete vampyre, and that he can be killed. She needs to journey across the desert to find the exiled guardian of the land, the "lon", and bring back his Starhoof, and then slay the Darkangel. Easy, right? It's especially harder when Aeriel starts to feel for the Darkangel after her stories bring him nightmares: proof he's not completely evil.

No, the true power behind him (and the other six vampyres of the world--moon, actually, this entire trilogy takes place on the moon! knowing that the more interesting this story becomes) is the White Witch, who steals babes and gilds their hearts with lead. If Aeriel can't gather the other six lons of the world before the Witch creates another Darkangel, everything is lost.

As you can see so far, this story is pretty unique, and has a very poetic, fairytale-ish style. It's not for everyone, but it's like nothing else out there. If you want something fresh and new, this is about as fresh as you can get.

It's not without its flaws, though. The prose is sometimes really strange, even for me, who grew up adoring it. And Aeriel, our main character, is way more passive than anything, and lets the plot carry her along wherever it needs to. It never bothered me as a kid, but it's something I wish now was different. 

There's also some unpleasant racial coding, especially regarding Erin, the very dark-skinned friend (skin color is strange in this book, but she's read as black) of Aeriel, who at the end is referred to as Aeriel's "shadow", even though it's said lovingly. That as an author isn't a very wise choice to make. Especially since, as a character, she's usually the one doing all the work in the background getting no credit, the one everyone else thinks is always lying, the one everyone else thinks has done Aeriel harm when anything happens, etc. As a white author there's just some things you could think of ... not to do with a very dark-skinned character, you know? Especially when the main character is Very White.

Speaking of, I really disliked the beauty ideals: pale was beautiful, unmarred was beautiful ("you would be beautiful without those scars, etc."), things like that. There was also the matter of "odskins" <-- aka people whose skin color was purple, blue, green, etc. taken as slaves by people whose skin color was ""normal"", that maybe wasn't a good idea. Like if you're going to write a fantasy novel, that could be the part of reality taken out! (Especially """oddskins""")

But all in all, I still really love this book, and I'll probably keep reading it over and over.

Expand filter menu Content Warnings
More...