Oh Silver in the Bone. For being from such a well respected author, this beautiful, badass duology really fell under the radar for the sin of not just being about romance and being weird.
The original Silver in the Bone took me completely be surprise. It was a shockingly dark and uncomfortable dungeon crawling story that I described as being "as close to Dark Souls as a book for teenagers can get". It billed itself as a King Arthur retelling in a time where we were seeing a few of those (most notably Legendborn) The thing is, this series only vaguely uses Arthurian legend in its storytelling, and it pulls largely from lesser known mythology to tell its story.
Book two focuses on the aftermath of the kid's big long MacGuffin failure of epic proportions- in their search for breaking curses and finding Neve's mom, the crew find themselves looking at a devastated Avalon, a face turned heel Cabell working with the enemy, and back in the real world with nothing but questions.
Silver in the Bone is such a well paced story- theres always something happening, but it also reserves a lot of moments for pure character development. We get this quite a bit with the siblings in this book, with Cabell being a secondary POV character giving the perspective into why he betrayed the crew and what life is like as a henchman working for the bad guy.
The girls meanwhile, are scrambling to stop Lord Death while also evading the Wild Hunt. This plot line was honestly so much fun. This book is primary set in "our world", but we don't suddenly get thrown into an urban fantasy- Alexandra Bracken does a great job making all of the settings unfamiliar and a bit unsettling. Our main three ladies find themselves seeking salvation, and evading enemies they didn't even know they had.
Emerys, our little traitor love interest, also has a part to play in this book of course. I thought the managing of his relationship with Tasmin was excellent. Its challenging to make the two leads get together in book 1 and still have it be interesting, but a little betrayal and tension really make this work for a second book. Their "mean little rich boy" and "poor outcast girl" romance doesn't lose its bite in this book and actually grows quite a bit in maturity. Emery's character is added to quite a bit as well.
All of the secondary characters REALLY shined in this book, Nash particularly became a quick favorite- but there were even characters who get their introduction in this book who were incredible and charming. Tasmins limited POV does not at all diminish the way these characters are used.
The Mirror of Beasts has a lot of magic and mayhem, but is not as dark as the first installation. Regardless, it keeps the same mature tone, and actually gets snappier. Even if this second book is sort of the "Wrap up", it actually paces much better than book 1, which I recall many folks struggled to get into.
I would compare The Mirror of Beasts to the 6th-7th Harry Potter books quite comfortably (though this one is actually trans friendly, as a new non binary character brings some much needed joy in a dark setting) Our heroes on the run, the bad guys in control, the magic world in peril...and this book is VERY heavy on the friendship y'all. There is romance, but this is a great book about girls working together through a traumatic situation to save the world.
The ending felt rushed in the last 50 pages, but thats sincerely my only complaint. This duology is really nearly perfect to me, and I am so glad ive gotten the chance to experience it. GO BUY IT NOW!