Imagine that all the mythical creatures—dragons, krakens, basilisks, and so on—were real, but now extinct, leaving only their bones. Now imagine that consuming their bones bestowed upon you their magical abilities.
Welcome to California Bones.
Greg Van Eekhout has constructed a fantastic alternate universe Los Angeles, where osteomancers can breathe fire, turn invisible, breathe underwater, and even fly, but he's gone much further than that: the existence of osteomancy has changed the development of the world significantly, and this Los Angeles, though it may bear a passing resemblance to our own, is not. For starters, it's part of the kingdom of Southern California, and it's essentially a dystopia, ruled by a despotic osteomancer known only as the Hierarch. While Van Eekhout doesn't delve too deeply into the worldwide ramifications of osteomancy, he fashions a Los Angeles that's both terrifying and tantalizing to visit. I loved all the little details of how the magic was used, both by osteomancers and on non-osteomancers. The writing is full of vivid imagery of people and places. And I especially loved the inclusion of a couple important figures in Southern California's history.
The book centers on a heist. Daniel Blackland, son of a powerful osteomancer, is hired to break into the Ossuary of the Hierarch, who, incidentally, was responsible for destroying his family, so it's very personal. Meanwhile, the Hierarch's grandnephew, Gabriel Argent, has also had his family destroyed by the Hierarch (the Hierarch destroys a lot of families: he's an asshole), but he works for him, and he's on Daniel's tail. (The fact that their names are so similar is confusing, as I often thought I was reading about Daniel when I was reading about Gabriel and Daniel would not be doing or saying these things.) Seeing both sides is fun, and although Gabriel doesn't get nearly as much screentime as Daniel, there were times when, to my surprise, I found his sections more engaging and was sad when we switched back to Daniel.
Daniel assembles a crew with magical abilities like regeneration and shape-shifting and non-magical abilities like lock-picking, safe-cracking, sharpshooting...Cassandra has a lot of skills, okay. I found myself drawn to Daniel's friends more than Daniel himself, despite the fact that he's the most powerful magic guy of the bunch, and he's the one with the most personal stakes. Van Eekhout really conveys the sense that these are longtime friends and partners who have been on jobs many times; the camaraderie comes through, and that's what made me want to know even more about Cassandra, Jo, and Moth. (We are also repeatedly told that Daniel loves his friends and his friends love him, which is awkward because we can already see it in their interactions, but there is a reason, albeit one that's not explored a great deal.)
For the most part, the story follows the standard heist template, with some twists, of course, some of which work better than others. The actual heist, though harrowing and exciting in parts, lacked a certain energy for me that I couldn't quite put my finger on: this was the Main Event and it didn't completely feel like it. Obviously, it was never going to go entirely smoothly, and Van Eekhout takes the story in directions I was not expecting, a direction that crystallizes Daniel's character arc as one of determining who he really is, this boy with the power, the power that his dad gave him.
With a richly detailed world, a fascinating new magic system, and skilled, likable (and diverse) characters, California Bones is a noir-tinged crime story of power struggles, found families, and a fucking awesome magic system.