Happy release day!
Thanks to Goodreads for a giveaway copy to review in advance! The Luminaries drops November 1st and was a fun throwback to some of its YA precursors. It was a little hit and miss but I give this one 3.5 stars rounded up, as it improves as it finds its feet.
As one familiar with Dennard's Witchlands series and disappointed by the most recent installment, I was excited to see a change of pace in this supernatural throwback to pre-2010 YA vibes. I participated a bit in the Twitter choose your adventure event a couple years ago and the story was alluring. In this finished product, the worldbuilding was not entirely coherent for me and there were other issues, but there were also enough redemptive choices made to make me binge the latter half in one night.
The Luminaries are a global secret society of monster hunters, responsible for nightly purgings of regions affected by "spirits" that manifest Nightmares, AKA all sorts of monsters, by night. A supernatural fog rises, signalling the influx of creatures for the night, and rises again at dawn to signify it's done. Winnie Wednesday's region has limited the spirit's reach to a forest in the area, warded to contain everything; hunters go in nightly to kill things. Luminaries all have a day of the week as a surname, representing their clan and roles; some are the weapons designers, some run logistics, some are the really martial soldier sorts. Normal people, very few of whom live in the town to keep them away from any renegade monsters, are called "Nons" like a sort of muggle/mundane. If you're wondering, yes, there are some quite info dumpy passages, but they felt necessary and were woven in as well as they could be, I thought.
Winnie's father did something that left him on the run and rendered the entire remaining family persona non grata in the town, lowering their social and economic statuses greatly. I found this part extremely offputting, as does our main character; people treat her family as exiled traitors until she attempts the hunter trials, and then they flip on a dime and treat them all like long-lost friends. It's weird, and to compound the discomfort, Winnie's blatant poverty and emotional trauma were very on-page.
The book is structured very "like it says on the tin"; the blurbs mention Winnie going through the trials to become a proper hunter, and she does just that, checks boxes, and then the book ends. What frustrated me most was it felt as if the plot opened its mouth, prepared to make several different revelations that were then stifled, a really transparent lead-in for more books. Makes sense, but it also rendered it less unsatisfying. I would have liked more romance, or emotionl support for Winnie, but the whole thing with Winnie's remaining family being "cancelled" within the town stymies most of that, as she spends most of the book without many friends or confidantes.
The worldbuilding is at times very handwavey and I could go on all day wondering at how they have these "secret towns" run by them, how it all really works. It also reads quite young at times, and Winnie's narration summons some really cringeworthy similes at times. But a dark forest filled with monsters, a nerdy character riding her bike around and constantly adjusting her glasses, and a hot boy with secrets of his own who agrees to help train her all gave the story some really vintage paranormal YA ambience. And like with Dennard's other work, I found the prose really easy to breeze through once I got going. She's also written another lovable outcast romantic interest, something she's great at. The romance, when it does appear in tiny blips, has a whole hunter/monster vibe that I was absolutely living for. I need another book for more of that.
The world is delightfully diverse, both the humans and the monsters on the page. There are traditionals like basilisks and kelpies and werewolves (YAY), but there are unique creatures to the world like the vampiric arachnid Vampira, and a strange new creature only Winnie spots throughout the story and is constantly gaslighted about. Winnie herself is highly relatable in a few specific ways, as she exhibits many signs of high anxiety and panic attacks throughout the story, even displaying nervous physical habits that strongly resembled stims or a tactile OCD.
I think overall I enjoyed more than I didn't, and therefore my rating's a little above middle road. I'd like to see where this goes.