”It is during the Chaos Trials that true riders are born. Quartets will shatter, friendships will fracture, chivalry will give way to ambition. Many of you will fail. But for those who succeed, what will be the cost of collecting every elemental stone? And is a place at the Eyrie worth the price?”
Skandar and his friends enter their third year in the Eyrie, which brings new challenges: their unicorns are starting to act up, having entered their rebellious phase, and they have to take part in the Chaos Trials, their greatest challenge yet. Failing to complete the Trials means being declared a nomad at the end of the year. At the same time, Skandar's sister Kenna, who is trying to earn her place in the Eyrie, stands apart from everyone due to her bond with a wild unicorn. When a frightening truth is revealed, the lives of everyone on the Island are thrown into chaos.
I've been waiting for this book for a year and I am so glad to be able to report that this book was once again brilliant, exciting, entertaining, heartfelt and everything I hoped for. This series is one of my favorite series of all time. The Chaos Trials continues the stories of Skandar and his friends in a very exciting way – the plot thickens, the threads left open in book two are picked up again and the stakes get higher and higher - but also works as its own, individual novel. The book has its own strong plot - a beginning, a middle and an end – and that is how it's supposed to be: no book in a series should just be a bridge, it should stand on its own. I liked how Steadman developed the world in this book, expanded the lore surrounding magic and unicorns, introduced new threats and gave all the major characters new struggles that forced them to grow: some move in a darker direction, while some become better. All characters move forward and many of the central relationships also start shifting, which was super cool. The book manages to balance perfectly between the big and the personal, never forgetting its characters in favour of plot or action: it all comes down to the characters. A lot of the personal stuff was very sweet: there's some romance, there's winter dances and all that good stuff.
I love the characters of this series so much. The main quartet is fabulous and I genuinely cannot pick a favorite. They all have standout moments in this book that made me think "perhaps they are my favorite, after all". Steadman dives deeper into their vulnerabilities, testing all of them, revealing more and more layers of their personalities. We get to explore the reasons for Flo's endless people-pleasing, see Mitchell gather the courage to go after his crush, witness the way the events of the last book have shaped Bobby and made her into someone less over-focused on her own goals, and see Skandar be forced to grapple with his crumbling faith in the Island, his changing relationship with Kenna and the fragile place he has made for himself within the Eyrie. The friendship between the four of them - and their unicorns - is at the heart of the series and made me smile so goddamn many times. I love stories about friendships and found families, and they are definitely that. This moment stood out to me especially, because you really see how they feel comfortable leaning on each other, asking for help and showing emotion: ”’Help,’ he said in a small voice. He didn’t know what he wanted them to do. All he knew was that he needed them.” I especially have to mention how cool it is that the boys are able to comfortably show emotion in front of each other and their friends without anyone telling them to "man up" or "stop crying". The kids make mistakes sometimes and do not always act as they should, they are kids after all, but this is a very healthy friendship the four of them have going on. I love a good ride-or-die friendship group. This quote, among many, made me smile: ”They had worked together against terrible odds ever since they’d arrived. And their unicorns had been through it all with them. Their bonds were strong, even if the unicorns were testing them now. In the year to come, surely those foundations were going to matter more than anything?"
The side characters, especially Kenna, Amber and Agatha, also get great arcs. I liked them all in previous books, but this time I really found myself loving all three. Kenna especially has such a wild arc and I enjoyed every moment of it. She is in a very interesting position and the way Steadman explored feelings of loneliness, regret, anger and being persecuted through her was wonderful to read about. This book is much darker than the previous two, and it dives deeper into themes of persecution and prejudice, which I appreciated. It felt honest: you can't write about oppression without examining all the different ways it can cause someone to feel and react. In this book, the main kids begin to see all the ways in which the Island is not the dream utopia they thought it would be when they entered as new students: it's more corrupt, more unfair, crueler than it needs to be. I liked the slow unraveling of their naivety and innocence, and them learning to question those in power and the structures that they, before, many took for granted. I loved this frustrated quote from Kenna in which she verbalises one of the central themes of this series: ”What is with this Island hating people who’re different? What’s so bad about not being the same as everyone else?” I am a sucker for stories of outcasts finding their place and making room for themselves, people changing and deciding to be better tomorrow than they were yesterday, and of good people finding other good people to fight beside against injustice, in both small and big ways. Sometimes you need to battle to save someone from being wrongfully arrested, and sometimes just a teacher standing up for their student's rights is enough. Resistance takes many forms and all are needed.
The Chaos Trials were a lot of fun. I love stories about magical competitions, so figuring out the trials alongside the kids was great, as was seeing them fight monsters, face their fears, work together despite the trials being designed to tear them apart and learn to work better with their unicorns. The twists in the novel were also very intriguing and some of them genuinely gagged me: I read the last 50 or so pages with my mouth hanging open. I liked how Steadman dropped clues throughout the novel in a way that, when everything was revealed, it all made sense. The way this book ended left me desperate for book four - how am I supposed to wait for a whole ass year?!
One of my favorite aspects of the story was the way the idea of a unicorn/rider bond was explored. Kenna being bonded to a wild unicorn, Goshawk, presents all kinds of dilemmas: Should Skandar aim to fix her? Will the bond destroy her? Can she and Goshawk ever be truly happy together? Can a forged bond be good and loving just like a fated bond despite the brutality of its creation? I just love the way, with every book, we get to understand the wild unicorns more and more. In the beginning, they were mostly just scary beasts, but now, they have become symbols of the Island's failings. As Skandar put it, in one of the most moving sections of the book: ”Whatever the wild unicorns were thinking, Skandar knew the image of them bellowing out to sea would stay with him for ever. It was a damning illustration of what the Island had done. The consequence of the choice they’d made to outlaw an element. These wild unicorns should have been allied to spirit. They should have had a rider to take them on adventures. They should have had someone to love them. But it wasn’t too late. Not yet.” The profound loneliness of the wilds, the fact that they are doomed to die forever, alone without their destined friends, just makes me so sad. I hate it when animals or mystical creatures are sad. On the other hand, all the stuff with our quartet and their unicorns made me smile, because I just adore magical, fated bonds and animal companions. Scoundrel and Skandar are an especially cute, adorable duo.
One last thing I want to highlight is how happy it made me that in this book Mitchell's queerness is made canon and clear. His relationship with Jamie is written in such a delicate, sweet way, and I love that, in this world, even though the Island is divided by prejudice, there is no homophobia to deal with. It's all normalised. Seeing open queer representation in my kid lit would've made me so happy as a child and probably would've helped me figure out my own identity much sooner. I am so grateful that Mitchell, Jamie and the other queer characters in this book exist: knowing this series is such a huge hit and that so many kids can learn about different ways of loving or see themselves reflected in the heroes of this fun adventure series, is so, so important!
I cannot wait for book four. I love this series with my whole heart. Reading it makes me feel nostalgic for those times when I read adventures like this as a kid and gives me that warm fuzzy feeling that only a well-written middle grade adventure fantasy can. I feel so at home in this world.