Title: The Losting Fountain [on Amazon | on Goodreads]
Series: None (so far...but a continuation of the story is implied)
Author: Lora Senf [Site | Goodreads]
Genres: Supernatural
Year: 2024
Age: 14+
Stars: 4/5
Pros: Creative premise. Rich, fascinating worldbuilding. Deceptively simple - but as a matter of fact expertly crafted - prose.
Cons: Lacks that extra ingredient that makes you bond with the characters on a visceral level. One twist is easy to anticipate. While the story doesn't end on a cliffhanger, there are a number of loose threads left for a sequel to pick up (if you prefer your books to be self-contained).
WARNING! Blood and gore, death/animal death, suicide (off-page), child abuse (off-page), injuries/mutilations, burns, near-drowning, body horror, bugs.
Will appeal to: Those who enjoy a creative portal-fantasy-adjacent world with quirky characters.
Blurb: Ember, Miles, and Sam have been called home - only home is a place none of them have ever been before. The choices they make will not only determine their own futures but will also have vast and permanent consequences - they will either restore a cosmic balance or destroy the dams that separate two worlds, ending them both. Hidden below the surface, the world of the Fountain is vast: unexplored and unmapped and full of wild things. There are other entities as well, entities that haunt and hunt in the Fountain, because it rewards nearly as often as it punishes, and it has been punishing the greedy and merciless and cruel for a very long time. The borders between our world and the world of the Fountain are already porous. If the balance between them is upset and control of the Fountain is lost, the consequences will be rapid, merciless, and world-ending. For Ember, Miles, and Sam, all from different times, what starts as a journey to take control of their lives quickly becomes a quest to save - or destroy - both worlds, depending on whom you ask. (Amazon excerpt)
Review: First off...DISCLAIMER: I requested this title on Edelweiss. Thanks to Union Square & Co. for providing a temporary ecopy. This didn't influence my review in any way.
ITS OWN MAGIC
I'm always on the hunt for books that bring something new to the table, so I decided to give The Losting Fountain a chance - based both on the synopsis and on Seanan McGuire's endorsement by way of a blurb. I'm pleased to say that this novel is, indeed, a fresh spin on the portal fantasy genre (though in an oblique way, since the island where the Fountain resides can't be accessed from your average portal) and the teen heroes/chosen ones trope. If the Fountain is slightly reminiscent of the Shop Where Lost Things Go from Seanan McGuire's Wayward Children series, Senf does something entirely different with the premise by having the Fountain act as a moral compass: from time to time, it calls to people who have lost something and gives them the chance to retrieve it, but if they get greedy and try to take other things that didn't use to belong to them, the Fountain punishes them and...recycles them for other purposes. At the same time, it serves as a defense, preventing nightmarish creatures from another dimension from creeping into our world (and into any when, which adds an exciting layer to the plot). There's a complex (though not overwhelming) magic system at play with regards to the Fountain and the island, and while I was a little frustrated by some half-explanations, I suppose they have a rhyme and reason in a story that purposefully leaves some threads hanging in view of a possible sequel. [...]
POINT OF CHARACTER(S)
The Losting Fountain is almost exclusively narrated by three teens from 1913, 1989 and "now" who have been summoned to the island (if in different capacities), and a young resident of the island itself (part of a seemingly human, but winged raced), determined to find her own answers at the cost of leaving the place and coming back to an unfriendly welcome - to say the least. All the teens' stories are potentially heartbreaking, and one of them offers a late twist, though I have to say that it isn't hard to anticipate. Abuse, neglect and abandonment play a pivotal role in the teens' quest for the Fountain, and though the story doesn't take on a decidedly bleak tone because of that, it's permeated by a sense of sadness, which, along with the quiet, almost fablelike (if dark) vibe, renders the book more suitable for readers who don't need their stories to be full of action. Last but not least, while the main characters (and some of the deuteragonists) are easy to like, or - in one case - to empathise with at least, I have to say that I didn't manage to form a strong emotional attachment with them, which usually makes all the difference for me in terms of rating. Regardless, I found The Losting Fountain to be a clever, well-crafted and well-written story with enough stakes at play for me to be invested in a sequel (also because there's so much terrain to explore on the island yet, both in a literal and metaphorical sense...).
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I adore Seanan McGuire and would be interested in this one just because she endorsed it as well. I think I'll see if my library will get a copy and give it a try. I will admit the animal death worries me a bit but I'm usually okay as long as I know going into it. Thanks for the heads up!
ReplyDeleteIt will be out on the 31st. I didn't know you were such a McGuire fan! Yay!
DeleteKind of interesting to bring teens from different time periods together. I can imagine they come with very different points of view/experiences.
ReplyDeleteExperiences, yes...POVs, not so much, because there's not much time or reason to develop these in conversations.
DeleteI'm glad it was good even if you didn't reach an emotional attachment with the characters.
ReplyDeleteThat would have probably brought my rating to 5 stars!
DeleteI does sound like a unique take on portal fantasies. It's too bad about not connecting 100% with the characters, but everything else sounds very well done😁
ReplyDeleteThe portal fantasy aspect is indeed different and intriguing!
DeleteThis sounds like such a fascinating twist on the portal fantasy genre! I love the idea of the Fountain as both a moral compass and a barrier against nightmarish creatures—it’s such a unique concept. The blend of fable-like storytelling and darker themes sounds really compelling, even if it leans more on quiet introspection than action.
ReplyDelete