A review by rocketcityreader
Blood and Moonlight by Erin Beaty

dark mysterious tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? No
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

4.0

Thank you to NetGalley for the ARC! 

“Our lives are as short and fleeting as phases of the moon.”

I love Erin Beaty’s ‘The Traitor’s Circle’ trilogy, and so when she first announced she was writing a new fantasy story, I immediately added it to my Most Anticipated list. And I wasn’t disappointed. 

One of the things I really love about Beaty’s fantasy stories are how realistic they feel.

Blood and Moonlight is set in the fictional world of Collis, but it feels a lot like Paris, France. The Gothic architectural designs mentioned mirror that of Notre Dame or Rouen Cathedral or Sainte-Chapelle de Vincennes. A familiarity with the kind of architecture she was writing about really helped set the scene. 

Beaty tackles the concept of serial killers in this YA Fantasy, and does so with such incredible accuracy that there were moments I forgot I was reading fiction. Her knowledge of criminal investigations and psychological profiling into serial criminals was astonishingly accurate, with all of her detective’s anecdotes about how these killers think being based in true crime fact. Every time the detective added another piece to the mental puzzle, I wanted to cheer. 

One of the characters has schizophrenia, so there was a lot of talk about mental illness and stigmas around it. There was also an author’s note about how she specifically addresses mental illness in this book, but I loved being able to read about all the various ways those who struggle with mental illness are treated by those around them. It was a different, but accurate, depiction of how mental illness can impact someone and their loved ones. 

The magic and religion systems in this book were simple and easy to follow. The two deities are the Sun and the Moon (one is good, one is bad). There is a group of people, the Selenae, who get magick from the Moon and are able to use it to heal, to enhance their senses as night, and hear thoughts/connect to minds through blood and moonlight. This is Beaty’s first book in which magic is part of the world, but it fits seamlessly with the rest of the story. 

Overall, I really loved this book! It was a fun, quick read with an engaging plot and fun characters. 

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