Title: Adrift in Currents Clean and Clear [on Amazon | on Goodreads]
Series: Wayward Children (10th of ?? books)
Author: Seanan McGuire [Site | Goodreads]
Genres: Supernatural (technically it would be Portal Fantasy, but since I don't have a Fantasy Room in my blog, I decided to shelf this one as Supernatural - that's the closest I could get)
Year: 2025
Age: 14+
Stars: 3.5/5
Pros: An imaginative look-in-reverse at one of the most common fantasy tropes. Features an engaging protagonist and a very endearing turtle. Raises questions about disability and bodily autonomy.
Cons: Even as a child, the main character talks like a semi-adult sometimes. Her story breaks what were understood to be two cardinal rules of travelling through the doors.
WARNING! Near-drowning.Will appeal to: Readers who like a twist on a classic lost-in-Wonderland premise. Everyone who's ever felt out of place, but doesn't necessary dream of a happier world than the one they live in...
Blurb: Nadya never considered herself less than whole, not until her adoptive parents fitted her with a prosthetic arm against her will, seeking to replace the one she'd been missing from birth. Frustrated and unable to express why, Nadya began to wander, until the day she fell through a door into Belyrreka - and found herself in a world of water, filled with child-eating amphibians, majestic giant turtles, and impossible ships that sailed as happily beneath the surface as on top. In Belyyreka, she found herself understood for who she was: a Drowned Girl, who had made her way to her real home, accepted by the river and its people. But even in Belyyreka, there are dangers, and trials, and Nadya would soon find herself fighting to keep hold of everything she had come to treasure. (Amazon excerpt)
Review: A while ago, I decided I wouldn't write full reviews anymore for certain types of books, including novellas. But since I've been reviewing this series in full from the start, I'm making an exception here, and I intend to go on doing so for all its future installments. So, I'll keep writing a mini review after my first read, and a full one after my second.
MAGIC FORMULA
This book came out seven years after Nadya's first appearance in the series (in Beneath the Sugar Sky), and when it was announced, I couldn't help thinking that writing an origin story for a side character whom most readers were likely to barely remember (unless they had reread the series in the meantime) was an odd choice. I mean, she had so little screen time back then, even if the book's epilogue had her front and center, and seven years is a very long time. Then again, in my case, this proved to be beneficial in a way, because I had completely forgotten a crucial point in Nadya's biography, and the ending of AICCAC came as a twist to me for that reason, though of course the author didn't intend for it to work that way. But I'm getting ahead of myself here...the aforementioned ending needs to be discussed in full (though I'll do my best in order to avoid spoilers), but in the meantime, allow me to start from the beginning.
Let's get it out of the way: this installment reminded me a bit of Across the Green Grass Fields (which is my least favourite Wayward Children book to date) with its classic-fable-like atmosphere and premise (talking, intelligent animals). In tone, it also reminded me of the author's The Up-and-Under series under the A. Deborah Baker pen-name (which, again, left me lukewarm). But I found the water world to be inventive, the sweet and caring, yet brave and independent protagonist easy to like and root for, and the human-bonded, sentient turtles infinitely more appealing (and endearing) than the mythical equine species in ATGGF. Also, it was nice to see some disabled representation in this one, though the waters are a bit muddled in that respect (no pun intended)...Nadya was born with only half a right arm, but she never thinks of herself as broken and resents her adoptive parents for fitting her with a prosthesis against her will, yet she doesn't complain when the river's magic does something similar with her in the portal world. Last but not least, for a book where the main character isn't asked to be a hero and the real action is crammed in the last 25 pages, AICCAC never gets boring, and proceeds nicely towards its climax (though, well, "nicely" may be a charitable word here, given what awaits our protagonist). [...]
A MATTER OF VARIANCE
I'll be honest, I have a few quibbles with some parts of the story - like child Nadya talking well above her age sometimes - but they don't weigh much for me in the grand scheme of things. Where the book fails though (or at least leaves its readers scratching their heads) is, mostly, in breaking a couple of established rules the portal world were supposed to live by. What happened to "being sure" you wanted to stay? Does "being sure" mean that you have to consciously focus on choosing the world you've been swept into ALL THE TIME? McGuire does her best to ground what happens to Nadya at the end, but her rationale still feels weak - and yeah, I guess with magical worlds, "rationale" is a big word to use, but I still think Nadya's predicament is at odds with the way the portal worlds are supposed to work (at the very least, one is under the impression that she gets punished for her courage and her thirst for knowledge). And speaking of consistency (or lack thereof), even the rules of time get bent in this one - which feels especially jarring after a couple of installments have revealed a huge secret about the way time itself works when you travel to and from the doors. But even without that kind of knowledge...what happens to Nadya is unprecedented, and feels like a (cruel and disturbing) gimmick. On the other hand, it's probably what tells her story apart from the usual Wayward Children mold the most, so - on a purely narrative level - it at least makes this installment stand out more than it would have if the ending had been different. But still...
For my "Skeleton Song" review (prequel short story) click here. For my "Every Heart a Doorway" review (first installment in the series) click here.
For my "Down Among the Sticks and Bones" review (second installment in the series) click here.
For my "In Mercy, Rain" review (companion short story, following "Down Among the Sticks and Bones") click here. For my "Beneath the Sugar Sky" review (third installment in the series) click here.
For my "In an Absent Dream" review (fourth installment in the series) click here.
For my "Juice Like Wounds" review (companion short story, outtake from "In an Absent Dream") click here.
For my "Come Tumbling Down" review (fifth installment in the series) click here. For my "Across the Green Grass Fields" review (sixth installment in the series) click here. For my "Where the Drowned Girls Go" review (seventh installment in the series) click here. For my "Lost in the Moment and Found" review (eighth installment in the series) click here. For my "Mislaid in Parts Half-Known" review (ninth installment in the series) click here. For more Supernatural books click here.
I think I feel off after the fifth installment. I do love this series and plan on someday starting at book one again. You know I adore this author. I have to admit the Sugar Sky book was my least favorite of all I read and it's reading it again that has probably put me off. However, who knows, maybe I will appreciate it more the second time around.
ReplyDeleteI love the sentient turtles you described and really must meet them. The world in this one sounds really good. Great review and glad you are still enjoying these ones. I always look forward to a new one being announced and then released in January of each year. Hope the series continues to grow.
The upside is that they're so short and it doesn't take much to catch up. It's funny, because Sugar Sky is one of my faves, but it looks like I'm in the minority on that. Anyhow, you might indeed enjoy it more the second time around - these things happen! I love how this world keeps expanding (without forgetting the old characters), and there's still so much to look forward to.
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