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richellemelynda 's review for:
Becoming Leidah
by Michelle Grierson
Becoming Leidah is a historical fiction that weaves magic and folklore into the real world. Leidah’s story is not given a specific time period that it takes place. That being said the events of this book take place in Norway; when Christianity was new and old Norse ways were dying out. The book is told from multiple POVs (Leidah, Maeva, Pieter, etc), and is told through different time periods and perspectives. The author has cleverly separated these into overarching chapters that relate to Norse mythology and customs; these are What Was, What Is, The Knots, and The Threads. Each tells its own story involving the characters, and as they weave together, you are able to piece together how everything is connected.
Leidah is a curious 7 year old who has awakened long hidden magic. She loves her parents, is wiser than her years and wants to fit in with the regular people despite her differences. She doesn’t understand why people treat her and her mother differently, but despite this she remains happy and trie to figure things out on her own. Her inner monologue is one of wanting understanding and clarity on how the world works, must like every other child who faces diversity. Maeva, Leidah’s mother, has hidden her past from everyone. She has gone through a lot and is ostracized from the village. She is not form there and therefore will never be fully accepted by anyone. She faces challenges regarding hiding her magical ancestry, religion, cultural, and raising a family with her fisherman husband, Pieter. The other characters that we get some POV from are all very original and well thought out. The way these characters lives revolve around each other whether loosely or intricately allowed the disjointed timelines to weave together by the end of the story.
The more books that I read that involve Norse mythology, the more I wish I knew more about it. World-building. The world-building in this story is amazing. You feel like you are there with the characters. The storylines and time jumps weave together well. Michelle Grierson clearly spent a lot of time researching and developing this story. The writing style is good. It wraps you up in the story and pulls you in. I just wish that it wasn’t so jumpy from character perspectives to time period. I felt like I finally got connected to the story in one place, then the next chapter was a different character at a different time and place. The story also has a lot of mystery and open-endedness to it. Some of the mysteries created in Becoming Leidah are left for you to use your imagination and I can’t help but wonder and hypothesize what happened after the ending.
ARC provided by NetGalley and Simon & Schuster CA
Leidah is a curious 7 year old who has awakened long hidden magic. She loves her parents, is wiser than her years and wants to fit in with the regular people despite her differences. She doesn’t understand why people treat her and her mother differently, but despite this she remains happy and trie to figure things out on her own. Her inner monologue is one of wanting understanding and clarity on how the world works, must like every other child who faces diversity. Maeva, Leidah’s mother, has hidden her past from everyone. She has gone through a lot and is ostracized from the village. She is not form there and therefore will never be fully accepted by anyone. She faces challenges regarding hiding her magical ancestry, religion, cultural, and raising a family with her fisherman husband, Pieter. The other characters that we get some POV from are all very original and well thought out. The way these characters lives revolve around each other whether loosely or intricately allowed the disjointed timelines to weave together by the end of the story.
The more books that I read that involve Norse mythology, the more I wish I knew more about it. World-building. The world-building in this story is amazing. You feel like you are there with the characters. The storylines and time jumps weave together well. Michelle Grierson clearly spent a lot of time researching and developing this story. The writing style is good. It wraps you up in the story and pulls you in. I just wish that it wasn’t so jumpy from character perspectives to time period. I felt like I finally got connected to the story in one place, then the next chapter was a different character at a different time and place. The story also has a lot of mystery and open-endedness to it. Some of the mysteries created in Becoming Leidah are left for you to use your imagination and I can’t help but wonder and hypothesize what happened after the ending.
ARC provided by NetGalley and Simon & Schuster CA