A review by karis321
The Beasts We Bury by D.L. Taylor

3.0

~~Thank you to NetGalley and Macmillan for the ARC!~~

3.5/5 stars rounded down.

I think this book will be a big hit with its intended audience when it officially releases next year. I think it will be deserving of that, but I don't think I'll be sharing in that enthusiasm.

Not that I think the book is bad by any means. Mance and Silver were great main characters in their own right, and I always think it's incredible when an author manages to distinct two different character POVs so well, especially in a debut. Their banter was genuinely good at times, and I found it very sweet with the forwardness Mance displayed in certain scenes (If you know you know) despite the very obvious lack of experience she had. Plus, the betrayal elements were built up well, particularly because the contrast shown in both POVs, where Silver is drowning in guilt with all he's doing, despite being initially oblivious to what he was doing, and Mance gradually coming to trust him completely despite it all. It made for some excellent tension and angst.

The things holding me back are the worldbuilding and the humor. The worldbuilding, particularly the realm/kingdom structure, is condensed heavily in the beginning, and the knowledge barely stuck with me throughout the rest of the story. I dunno, it was just hard for me to visualize much of the world. But I did really like the magical glass trees. As for the humor - it was good except when its timed poorly in dire situations. Like, a meager battle happened because of Mance's dad's manipulations where many a-casualties freshly occurred, and Silver was making jokes in the prose and dialogue about getting to her. I found that very awkward and poorly timed, even if it was to relieve some tension, but, again, time and place.

I dunno if I'm going to read the next book. The ending left me a bit curious to what Taylor has planned next, but whether I will commit to that curiosity is the question. I think I'll be waiting until the synopsis/cover for Book #2 comes out next year, but, until then, I will be saying this was a good read for people to check out for themselves.