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Star Eater

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From Nommo Award finalist Kerstin Hall comes a debut novel that is "an utterly compelling fantasy" (A. K. Larkwood, author of The Unspoken Name).
ALL MARTYRDOMS ARE DIFFICULT.
Elfreda Raughn will avoid pregnancy if it kills her, and one way or another, it will kill her. Though she's able to stomach her gruesome day-to-day duties, the reality of preserving the Sisterhood of Aytrium's magical bloodline horrifies her.
For a brutal price, the matriarchal Order keeps their city afloat above a haunted continent full of monsters. She wants out, whatever the cost.
So when a shadowy faction approaches Elfreda with an offer of escape, she leaps at the opportunity. As their spy, she gains access to the highest reaches of the Sisterhood and enters a glittering world of opulent parties, subtle deceptions,
and unexpected bloodshed.
A phantasmagorical indictment of hereditary power, Star Eater takes readers deep into a perilous and uncanny world where even the most powerful women are forced to choose what sacrifices they will make, so that they might have any
choice at all.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 29, 2021
      Hall’s full-length fantasy debut (after novella The Border Keeper) stumbles over its many plot twists as a young woman becomes entangled in a scheme to undermine the ruling order. The Sisterhood of Aytrium demands grisly sacrifices from its initiates—so when a member of an insurrectionist splinter group within the Sisterhood offers Acolyte Elfreda Raughn an opportunity to get out of the worst of these duties in exchange for spying on their enemies, she gladly accepts. Hall’s prose is vivid and the characterization is incisive as Elfreda’s involvement with the insurrectionists grows and ultimately places a target on her back, but a pile-up of minor plot swerves make for a bumpy reading experience. Insubstantial foreshadowing makes some of these surprises feel like they come out of nowhere while others manipulate insufficiently established loopholes in the rules of the world. Hall expertly shows the day-to-day impact of the sociopolitical aspects of Aytrium, and the system through which magic is inherited plays out in a darkly fascinating way, but some worldbuilding strokes are so subtle as to be easily overlooked. This causes later revelations to fall flat as Elfreda tries to save herself and dismantle the corrupt Sisterhood. Readers who can forgive the flaws, however, will find this a powerful indictment of how power erodes ethics.

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