Ratings7
Average rating3
A heroine who's Autistic? That caught my attention! I'm so glad it did.
Unseelie tells us the story of Iselia (Seelie) Graygrove and her identical twin sister, Isolde. Seelie is a changeling (at first I wasn't sure how a changeling could have an identical twin and both be living in the human world, but that's explained as the story unfolds). She and Isolde have fled their home and live by their wits and Isolde's skills as a thief. They look alike, but they are very different in abilities and personalities.
When they go after a legendary treasure at the home of a powerful family, they run afoul of not only the family, but also others looking to steal the same treasure. They flee, and along the way, find that the other thieves have interests in common with them, and they all fall in together. In the middle of pursuit and combat, Seelie is trying to master her unpredictable, unreliable, often dangerous magic that she has spent a lifetime squashing down.
Seelie is a fascinating character! The fact that she is autistic is part of who she is, and it plays a role in her interactions with people and things around her. But it isn't ALL she is. She's also a teenage girl who desperately wishes she could return home, who's afraid of the magic she carries but doesn't understand. She's a sister, a daughter, a friend.
The other characters weren't quite as well fleshed out as Seelie, but were still enjoyable. Raze has potential as a love interest, and the banter/sniping between him and Seelie was entertaining. I also really liked the tension in Olani, between her ability to be a ruthless combatant in a fight and then to gently heal people's injuries.
It was almost painful to see Seelie realizing that, even though she and Isolde are twins, they won't always share the same goals and ideas. I'm interested to read the second book in what is to be a duology to see how they handle that conflict. Seelie hasn't thought much beyond her desperate longing for home. Isolde, now that she's seen a world of adventure, wants more than just returning to what was.
And this is a young adult fantasy. The characters act like teenagers and young adults, not adults full-grown and mature. Sometimes they make stupid decisions. Sometimes their emotional upheaval is a little bit grating. But they learn from their choices, and they grow as characters. That's how this thing is supposed to work, right?
The characters are engaging, the storyline intriguing, and Housman's writing style is positively lyrical. All these elements combine to make this a solid four-star read for me, and to make Housman an author I'll read more from.
Disclaimer: I received a review copy from Harlequin Trade Publishing and NetGalley. All opinions here are mine, and I don't say nice things about books I don't actually like.