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A review by thecaffeinatedreader
The Fever King by Victoria Lee
dark
emotional
medium-paced
4.5
I received this book from the publisher via NetGalley in exchange for my honest review. [I did, however, buy my kindle book the same time I was approved for the eARC and that is the version I read]
I ended up deciding to round my 4.5 up to 5 rather than keep it at 4 after sleeping on it.
https://thecaffeinatedreader.com/2019...
First off I love this idea of magic being a virus, that it's not supposed to be a gift but yet still we have witchings.
Also, while magic is a good part and we have witchings which are the centre of a Holocaust scaled genocide in the US, Lee also gives us a good hard look at immigrants dealing with a country where the virus is an even more common fear for them, and so they go to another country, Carolinia to escape the horrors of Atlantia. And it is a beautifully tragic parallel to today's world and its problem with immigration. People just wanting to find a place to call home where they can feel safe. Not to mention I just felt the political games were well done and my favorite part of the book.
There's a dystopia really when you look at it as a world where we have failed to keep others safe, and that the immigrants are suffering and there's a deadly virus that means magic can kill you.
Noam is half Latino half Jewish, and bisexual. I love that he talks about his ex-girlfriend while also acknowledging he has feelings for men. [Won't disclose who as I'd hate to ruin the story for you all!]
Lee really brings a very teenage-like presence to all the teenage characters which sometimes authors can forget to do she also writes some tragic scenes and they are beautiful and Victoria Lee likes to tear out your emotions and dangle them above your head.
I love the little flashes of Calix information and I wish there would have been more if anything I would say maybe the pacing felt off at times because at moments I would pause and think so much as happened in so little time or so little has happened and yet I feel like I read 200 pages. That combined with the fact that it wasn't always clear how much time had passed made pacing one of like the two issues for me. So pacing and I wish there would have been more of Noam and his crush interacting, it felt like we didn't have a lot of time with them and so their feelings are sometimes a bit hard for me to believe. Those are probably my only complaints.
I really can't wait to read the next book and I can't wait to see more of Noam!
I ended up deciding to round my 4.5 up to 5 rather than keep it at 4 after sleeping on it.
https://thecaffeinatedreader.com/2019...
First off I love this idea of magic being a virus, that it's not supposed to be a gift but yet still we have witchings.
Also, while magic is a good part and we have witchings which are the centre of a Holocaust scaled genocide in the US, Lee also gives us a good hard look at immigrants dealing with a country where the virus is an even more common fear for them, and so they go to another country, Carolinia to escape the horrors of Atlantia. And it is a beautifully tragic parallel to today's world and its problem with immigration. People just wanting to find a place to call home where they can feel safe. Not to mention I just felt the political games were well done and my favorite part of the book.
There's a dystopia really when you look at it as a world where we have failed to keep others safe, and that the immigrants are suffering and there's a deadly virus that means magic can kill you.
Noam is half Latino half Jewish, and bisexual. I love that he talks about his ex-girlfriend while also acknowledging he has feelings for men. [Won't disclose who as I'd hate to ruin the story for you all!]
Lee really brings a very teenage-like presence to all the teenage characters which sometimes authors can forget to do she also writes some tragic scenes and they are beautiful and Victoria Lee likes to tear out your emotions and dangle them above your head.
I love the little flashes of Calix information and I wish there would have been more if anything I would say maybe the pacing felt off at times because at moments I would pause and think so much as happened in so little time or so little has happened and yet I feel like I read 200 pages. That combined with the fact that it wasn't always clear how much time had passed made pacing one of like the two issues for me. So pacing and I wish there would have been more of Noam and his crush interacting, it felt like we didn't have a lot of time with them and so their feelings are sometimes a bit hard for me to believe. Those are probably my only complaints.
I really can't wait to read the next book and I can't wait to see more of Noam!