![]() In a twist on the classic antagonist, luckily for Cam Gyaar's actually a pretty decent dude. ![]() Gyaar might not be as brutal as his old man, but he's the one that Cam comes face-to-face with the most. ![]() The book's slow pace may put off some readers, but those who stick with it will be well rewarded. He's in direct opposition to Cam on the battlefield and in his search for what happened out there. Themes of rebuilding and redemption are powerful, but it is in the small, acutely observed details of debut author Hinwood's world that her story truly shines. A boy who befriends and then falls in love with Cam brings a particularly heart-wrenching thread to the story, as does the character of Diido, a girl who loses everything in the war except the spirit that helps her find a new life. After falling out with his family, Cam seeks out the son, Lord Gyaar, to find answers. At the heart of this story, which moves among characters in almost vignette-like chapters, is Cam, a boy who went off to war (and loses an arm) but returns many years later, bewildered that his life-alone-was spared by the son of the lord who won the war. ![]() In the aftermath of war in a preindustrial world long divided between Uplanders and Downlanders, a fractured community recovers and a new country begins to find its identity. ![]()
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