It's a wonderful feeling when you try a new author, and you get a story that's fresh and fully-baked, crafted with fine ingredients and a steady hand. (I don't know where the food analogy came from, maybe I'm hungry.)
It's also a wonderful feeling when the author is still relatively unknown to your fellow reading folks, so now, one must tell everyone to try their book. That is what this review is for -- fans of faith-filled fantasy, you simply must open these pages!
As far as I know this is Cheever's first full-length novel, but she crafts her world with complete confidence, and I immediately felt immersed in the setting and plight and connected with the sincerity of her characters.
The hero and heroine of this tale are already married with four young children! I was quite delighted by this, and really appreciated how genuine the couple and family felt. The struggle in communication and trust is ongoing for our couple, but one can clearly see how they love one another. Their conflicts with each other sometimes feel petty or easily resolved without foolish comments, but then one remembers with shame that MOST arguments/divisions in relationships are of this nature. So they are easy to root for as they learn more about each other and the prophecy and magic they have called to fulfill.
Oh, they're also goblins. The goblins of this story may be short, green, and classically goblin in appearance, but they also noble, lively, heroic, faithful, empathetic, and just all-around "human." They have such confidence in their own skin that a reader's typical beauty standards are set aside to believe in the beauty they find in each other.
The elves, by contrast, are supremacist terrorists, persecuting the goblins for their faith and race. The fae are dangerous, frivolous creatures absorbed in hedonistic parties.
Fortunately, even though the goblins have their opinions about the elves and faeries supposed "beauty," I never felt this story was a tale of "pretty" vs "ugly" as is sometimes the case in stories where opposing forces find their appearances so different. Perhaps it is because each race is confident in their own appearance even if they don't understand the others, perhaps it is because the elves and fae are not all wholly "evil" nor are the goblins all wholly "good." Our heroine finds a friend and ally in the debauched fae court, and there is a "Paul the Apostle" elf character coming in Book 2.
Content: Some grim moments of violence and cruelty due to the persecution. Mentioned SA of villagers by their captors, attempted SA interrupted by our hero. The beginnings of SA of the heroine by the fae, but she is delivered from further harm. Fade-to-black between the married couple and a couple of passionate kisses.
As such, this story was certainly meant for the adult reader who wishes for lovely fantasy with characters their own age and without explicit content, buuuut if an older teen reader is looking for good fantasy with established spouses and family and is already reading Sanderson, they could enjoy this too.
I look forward to book 2! Because since following the author, her mention of that "Paul the Apostle" elf character has my UNDIVIDED attention.