Back
Naomi Novik: Uprooted (Hardcover, 2015, Del Rey) 4 stars

"Our Dragon doesn't eat the girls he takes, no matter what stories they tell outside …

Review of 'Uprooted' on 'Goodreads'

3 stars

So my "recommended to me" notes for Uprooted were " A feminist twist on an Eastern European fairytale with interesting characters and a compelling magic system" and, it's...mostly as billed. But my personal kryptonite is immortal (or super old) character falls in love with a teenager. It bursts through my suspension of disbelief, my engagement with a book and just makes me want to set everything on fire. To add insult to injury, Uprooted also repeats the "guy is super dismissive to girl and she falls in love with him anyway" trope that I first met in Spinning Silver. In Spinning Silver it was haunting and evocative of the frozen tundra of the setting. Seeing it again from the same author? I think it's just her schtick and it made me not like Spinning Silver as much in retrospect. I resent that a lot.

But there are other parts of Novik's schtick I like: the interaction between magic and a place; the way a place shapes a people; strong female friendships between female characters with complementary strengths and profoundly evocative settings. Do they balance? Hard to say.