Abigail Owen’s YA novel BLUE VIOLET is a compelling supernatural romance about a race of beings, called “Svatura,” with both super longevity and super powers. In way, BLUE VIOLET is like a mash-up of the TWILIGHT books and the X-MEN comics. Ellie Aubrey is two centuries old, but she looks like a high school senior. She and her brother Griffin are the sole survivors of their clan of Svatura, and they witnessed the decimation of their people a century earlier by the vicious Vyusher, a tribe of metamorphs that live mainly as wolves. When Ellie begins having dreams about other Svatura living in Estes Park, Colorado, she and Griffin move there to investigate. What Ellie finds is not just a new family, but a soul mate, a man to whom she is connected by a power stronger than fate and more perfect than love. Ellie and Alex are “te’sorthene,” a term loosely defined as “soul mates” or “spirit partners.” Will their love be strong enough to keep them – and all the remaining Svatura – safe from the Vyusher?
There are definitely shades of TWILIGHT here – Ellie is pretending to be a normal high school senior, and her relationship with the mysterious Jenner family seems eerily like Bella’s relationship with the Cullens – parent-figures Lucy and Hugh are very like Esme and Carlisle; Hugh is even a doctor (or “healer,” as he’s called here). As Owen explains, the Svatura are not immortals, but they have very long life spans (hundreds, maybe thousands of years). Like the TWILIGHT vampires, they move frequently and keep to themselves. The Vyusher wolves are not werewolves, but rather beings that have taken on the shape of wolves and have become arch enemies to all the Svatura. They reminded me a bit of the Volturi in the TWILIGHT novels – evil enemies, but not totally different from those they fight against.
What IS different – and most refreshing – about BLUE VIOLET is Ellie Aubrey. Where TWILIGHT’s Bella is weak, clumsy, and insecure, Ellie is strong, confident, and courageous. Bella is the perennial damsel in distress, but Ellie is a heroine, leading her people, teaching them, and risking everything to save them from destruction. I admire Ellie. She is exactly the kind of young woman that can inspire teen readers to be self-confident and brave. Her relationship with Alex, while just as romantic and steamy as Bella’s relationship with Edward, is one of two equals who both love and respect each other. Alex does not spend his time protecting Ellie – she is just as capable of protecting him. Maybe even more so!
Additionally, the fact that Ellie and Alex are not really teenagers is important in BLUE VIOLET. They look young, but they have lived for a very long time (Ellie even says she met Abraham Lincoln!). At one point, Ellie considers dating Brian, a “normal” boy she meets at school, but she realizes that “being over two-hundred years old made dating a real teenager . . . creepy.” And when she and Alex finally realize their connection to one another, their relationship seems more mature than just kids getting all hot and heavy. There’s history in the lives they’ve lived, and their relationship is richer because of it.
Plotwise, there are as many twists and turns and as much excitement as the TWILIGHT novels. Owen has based her mythology on Romani – or Gypsy – stories and culture. The words “Svatura,” “Vyusher,” and “te’sorthene” are all Romani words. Owen suggests that the origins of the Svatura are as old as humanity, and that many of these people were murdered over the centuries as suspected witches and sorcerers. This is a fascinating concept with enough basis in fact to make it seem believable in spite of the supernatural elements. All of the Svatura have “super powers,” much like the various X-Men characters in the comics – one can freeze things in mid-air, another can create balls of fire from his hands, and others can shape-shift, teleport, mind-read, and turn objects into metal (even gold!). This made these characters more interesting, as each is unique (and each plays a pivotal role in the climactic battle at the end of the novel).
Overall, BLUE VIOLET is a well-written and exciting YA novel that has all the passion and thrills of TWILIGHT, while at the same time elevating Ellie Aubrey as a hero worthy of the name. This is a novel that treats women like human beings . . . even when they’re Svatura! I recommend this highly to any readers who enjoy supernatural romances. Without a doubt, it’s better than TWILIGHT! There are, admittedly, a few of the kinds of typos expected in self-published novels (especially toward the end), but that’s a minor point, hardly worth noting. Owen is working on the next book in her Svatura series, HYACINTH, which she hopes to release in 2013. There’s an excerpt from that second book at the end of BLUE VIOLET. Parents, this novel does include some scenes of violence and some descriptions of sexual situations, but there’s nothing here that should be a problem for teenagers. There’s no offensive language, no drug or alcohol use, and no actual sex. It’s a good book. I totally recommend it.
[Please note: I was provided a copy of this novel for review; the opinions expressed here are my own.]