What does it mean to forget your past?
Having left her small-town life behind, 19-year-old Emeline (who is coded as White) is on the verge of success in the contemporary folk-rock scene. But every time she sings, she sees the woods of her hometown coming for her: moss coming out of her microphone, bugs emerging from the floor. Emeline fears she’s losing her mind, much as her beloved grandfather has lost his memory to dementia. When Pa disappears from the care center and his friends say he’s been tithed, Emeline leaves bright, normal Montreal to return to Edgewood, where everyone believes in the Wood King and quarterly sacrifices. She finds herself in the heart of the woods, where her fight for her grandfather draws her into a mysterious curse—and a romance with the strangely familiar gray-eyed, brown-skinned Hawthorne. While the Wood King’s world lacks nuance, the themes of memory and forgetting and how they play into love and happiness provide some depth. Of particular note is the recurring question of how memory loss changes a person and their relationships, something that is poignantly addressed in the author’s note. The tone of this work will appeal to fans of Holly Black and Melissa Albert, although it doesn’t quite live up to their standards.
An intriguing theme let down by weak worldbuilding.
(Fantasy. 14-18)