A thoroughly enjoyable, exciting, and creative adventure!
We follow Kayode, a young frustrated boy in a village crushed by the menacing, earth walking gods known as the Orishas. Hamstrung by his people's cowardice, it takes a tragedy and a stroke of fortune for our young hero to get the power (and importantly, the allies) he needs to try and save his civilization, and his sister.
I will confess to having been completely ignorant to the Orisha's and Yoruba religion prior to reading this book, and seeing a different pantheon rather than the well-worn greek/roman crop was a welcome and important angle. It was fascinating to see an author explore gods from a religion that is still worshiped today, and quite brave of him to make said deities the villains (although names have been changed to protect their identities!)
It's tricky for me to review this book in some ways, as it's been a long time since I've read much middle-grade fiction, and I am not the target audience. But, I would very much have been 25 years ago! There are strong influences from Shonen anime, which I am very partial to - and would have enjoyed when I was younger as much as I do now.
The best comparison I can offer is with the recent and award winning Impossible Creatures by Katherine Rundell - which shares a lot in common with the book. They're both well researched around existing mythos, share the same target audience, have a fast paced story, and they even share a red/blue cover color scheme! While the writing in Impossible Creatures sometimes swells to poetry in a way that surely wooed awards panels, I preferred the even - story driven writing style of Thorpe's book, which always prioritized the plot, without being a smidge self-indulgent and flouncy in the way that jarred me when reading Rundell. The Boy to Beat The Gods also avoided any painful clichés or lazy named characters. So it's a favorable comparison from me.
Things I loved:
Each character in Team Kayode gets a chance to shine and be genuinely useful. No Sakura playing cheerleader in the back ground here.
A main character with a clear drive and personality *before* the event. Kayode is no passive protagonist - he wanted this adventure, he always wanted to fight - the events of the story are his chance to seize, rather than a trick of circumstance. Loved that.
Things I'd have loved to see:
Kayode actually land a punch on an Orisha! Apart from sucker-punching Eko, Kayode mostly inspires and distracts the big-bads, while his gang do the damage. As a kid this would have irked me, and it irks me still! I wanted to see him make the most of his godly powers.
A smidge more trickery from the trickster god, who is largely as good as his word. I expected an ulterior motive to punish Kayode's naiveté.
Overall - a big recommend from me, and I look forward to reading it with my son when he's old enough to enjoy a revenge quest!
(Disclaimer - I am friends with the author!)