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reviewed Labyrinth Lost by Zoraida Córdova (Brooklyn Brujas, #1)

Zoraida Córdova, Zoraida Córdova: Labyrinth Lost (Paperback, 2017, Sourcebooks Fire) 4 stars

"Alex is a bruja and the most powerful witch in her family. But she's hated …

Review of 'Labyrinth Lost' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

Alex does not want her magic. As far as her family knows, she's a late bloomer and yet to come into her power. They can't wait to celebrate her Deathday.

The format did remind me a little of the film Labyrinth, and many other quest type stories. Alex accidentally wishes her family away in an act of selfishness and then has to go into another dimension to rescue them, before time runs out. Along the way she meets an assortment of magical creatures and dangerous geographical features.

Alex's family is Puerto Rican by way of plenty of other countries, but the mythology is crafted from inspirations from many sources. Bruja is the Spanish word for witch and the idea of the Deathday was inspired by Día de Muertos, the Mexican Day of the Dead. It does have a little of the Greek about it too, there's a labyrinth after all and there's a scene that's very similar to the crossing of the River Styx.

Alex is a bit of a special snowflake and I also think the world-building was lacking a baseline in what regular bruja power was like. It's a pretty short book and she has several close encounters with different groups in Los Lagos, not giving much time for the book to feel fully fleshed out. Everything seems resolved just a little too easily, partly in thanks to those snowflake powers.

When the best friend, Rishi, is introduced they didn't come across as that close. When it starts talking about the strength of her love, it was a bit of a surprise. Generally the secondary characters needed a bit more work to really flesh them out.

It was a quick and entertaining read, so I wouldn't dismiss reading the second book in the series when it's out next year.