Jaron is BACK, people!
An enormous thank-you to Main Street Books in St. Charles for gifting me an ARC of this book, the fourth installment in one of my favorite series!
This will be a short, spoiler-free review, though I'll update it with spoilers once the book is published. (*entire, spoiler-filled review follows this first, non-spoiler review)
As a massive fan of the Ascendance Trilogy, delving into its expansion into the Ascendance Series was equal parts nervousness and excitement. After this trilogy, I read several of Jennifer Nielsen's other books as they came out, but was very underwhelmed by The Mark of the Thief, The Traitor's Game and The Scourge. I worried that I was no longer clicking with her storytelling. Then I read her historical fiction, and fell in love with all three (A Night Divided, Resistance and Words on Fire). So I was relieved that it wasn't her storytelling I no longer clicked with, just some of the stories. (Which, in hindsight, may not be a bad thing...perhaps that will increase their chances of clicking with other readers who have different tastes than I do.)
Jennifer Nielsen invites us to embark on another adventure, this one beginning at sea (which Jaron, with his affinity for the seaside, must have appreciated), and it is full of all of the action, twists, close calls and humor that we know, love and hope for in Jaron's escapades. I laughed out loud on multiple occasions, and one of my favorite comedic moments from the series would have to be from this fourth installment. One of my favorite things from the original trilogy is the friendships, and that was one of my favorite things to see in action in this latest escapade as well. Throughout the story, many chess pieces are being moved, and not always by Jaron, so it is definitely worth it to take your time reading the story to make sure you're following what's up; I was too impatient to know what happened next, and admit I didn't pay as good of attention as I should have to the details on my first read-through. I'm excited for the next read-through, and can't wait for fans to discover this latest installment in October, and I am PUMPED for book 5!!!
***SPOILERS AHEAD***
Jaron is back, people!
First, a tremendous thank-you to Main Street Books in St. Charles for gifting me an advanced reader’s copy. Never in my wildest dreams did I imagine receiving a special chance to read, months before release, the next installment in one of my favorite series. (Plus an excuse to hibernate for a week and live within its world.) Truly, my gratitude goes beyond words.
When I first heard that The Ascendance Trilogy was on the brink of expanding, thus exchanging “trilogy” for “series”, I went from ecstatic to nervous to equal parts of the two. The original trilogy is so wonderful that delving into an expansion of it felt risky. Plus, I’ve recently had a couple of less-than-great experiences with sequels and series continuations. But…I love these characters so much, that getting to spend more time with them and embark on more adventures and mischief with them…how could I not be excited about that?
Before embarking on the new adventures, I reread the original trilogy for the first time in a while. It was like coming home. Then I kept going. And I loved it.
Immediately, we find ourselves surrounded by all of our favorite characters (though I won’t lie, I do miss Errol a bit…I wonder what happened to him after The False Prince…), and we’re on a ship. Some tensions have already cropped up between some characters since we last saw them. Almost as immediately, danger approaches, and we don’t know who’s safe, who’s gone, and who to trust.
Except Erick. Erick’s definitely gone. It happened so fast I almost didn’t believe it. I don’t fully understand what he thought a few extra seconds would gain Jaron, since there’s nowhere to run, but he bravely defied Strick, standing up to her and ready to defend the ship and his crew with his life. I’m going to miss him. Rest in peace.
We meet the Prozarians, a people thought to have died out long ago, who are basically on a treasure hunt and, to get to their next step, have a deal with an apparently not-so-dead Darius to bring Jaron to the land of Belland, where a lot of things go down.
I loved the settings of this story, first on the ship (Jaron’s attempted mutiny and his later escape into the lifeboat gave me a terrific Jack Sparrow vibe), and then on the lush, gorgeous Belland (I suspect a nod to the meaning “beautiful land”), which I’m sure Jaron loved due to his affinity for the seaside. It was such fun to explore this new territory, which was so interesting with its natural formations.
The friendships Jennifer Nielsen has crafted in her stories form one of my favorite things about her stories, and I was thrilled to see the time dedicated to them and their development. I especially liked our time with the original trio from The False Prince. Tobias and Roden had kind of been off doing their own thing in The Runaway King and The Shadow Throne, so the frequent interaction of all three boys for the first time since competing to be the false prince was a great showcase of their character development, and also just fun to see. Their friendships underwent a lot of tension in this story, especially between Roden and Jaron, which tested their strength and made them stronger for it.
Expanding on Jaron’s friend group, pretty much all of his friends are pretty fed up with him doing his own thing and not trusting them with his plan and to help him. When this was getting really heated up, I actually had to put the book for a bit down to process it. My initial reaction was, “But that’s what makes Jaron/Sage who he is, and we love him!” He moves chess pieces without us understanding his endgame, or even his next move, and his moves sometimes depend on others not knowing. He keeps me guessing, and I love it. But then I realized…I’d be fed up, too. Jaron’s desire to keep others safe by withholding information in case they were to get captured by the enemy is noble and completely understandable, but this story really explores the consequences this has on those very relationships. Were I one of his close friends, I’d want him to trust me, too, to let me help him bear the burden.
One relationship I wish we’d gotten a little more information about, even though Harlowe was back in Carthya and so it would’ve had to be either via flashback or conversations, was how his and Roden’s father-son relationship was developing. But, while we didn’t really get to see that one, we got plenty of Jaron’s brother relationship with Fink, and how Darius’s return in Jaron’s life expanded his brotherhood, which I loved. Another relationship I was relieved to see stand strong was Jaron’s and Imogen’s. One of my fears with Wilta’s arrival was that she would try to flirt with both Jaron and Roden and thus cause strife between not only them, but also between Jaron and Imogen. I never suspected Jaron would be unfaithful, but I worried Imogen might be miffed. Thus, when Imogen proved how strong and smart she is, and told Jaron that Wilta’s implied romantic attention towards him didn’t bother her, I wanted to hug her.
As far as new characters go, I really liked them and what they brought to the story. I loved Darius, in particular. I loved how, when Jaron was told he was alive, he looked at the situation from both angles, accepted he could not know until they arrived at Belland, and waited. As a reader, I wasn’t sure what to expect, either. Was Darius truly alive? Or was it too good to be true? Immediately upon meeting Darius, I had a clear image in my mind of the type of person he was, and how different he and Jaron were. And as soon as it became evident that Darius assumed and expected that he would get the throne when they returned to Carthya, and that Jaron wasn’t worthy of it, I wanted to take him by the shoulders and shake some sense into him. Especially fresh off of my reread and still smarting from the abuse Jaron suffered, legit anger and hurt were stirring in me at his injustice, and I mentally screamed at Darius, “Do you realize what your brother went through for your country??? The pain he had to endure???” Sure, things couldn’t have been easy for Darius either, particularly once the strain of protecting the Bellanders from the Prozarians hit, but also, he himself admitted that he had a wonderful time living among the Bellanders. Jaron has grown so much since Darius last saw him, and when Darius finally realized that, it was incredibly gratifying.
As things began unfolding regarding Darius’s true identity, we learn the role of the infamous Bevin Conner in Darius’s life, adding another layer to a character I thought I knew so well. I admit, I absolutely did not see that coming. However, it fit so perfectly with what we already knew of the story and characters, it posed questions that I hadn’t really thought to ask, and made so much sense, that it in no way shape or form detracted from the characters or story as we knew them, only giving them further depth.
Wilta and Strick are two other big new additions. I immediately liked to dislike Strick. It took me longer to decide how I felt about Wilta. Personally, I am not a huge fan of instalove, so as soon as that poked its head between her and Roden, I started worrying it’d become a central part of the plot. Thankfully, Tobias felt the same. I cannot remember the last time I laughed so hard as when he chucked a boot at Roden’s head from the crow’s nest, and even better that Jaron (who Roden thought was the culprit anyways) fully approved. However, I definitely did not dislike the attraction between Roden and Wilta, and found the resulting banter among the friends a jolly mark of friendship. Still, I am happy it gracefully took the back seat, allowing other things to take the wheel. Pretty early on, though, I had a gut feeling that she could not be trusted, because of how quickly she seemed to click with them. But my guess had been a spy or double agent; I did not see her reveal as the Monarch, or as Strick’s daughter, coming.
Wilta’s reveal added another driving force to a story already full of many different moving parts. So many chess pieces were being moved by so many different characters/parties that, I must admit, it was sometimes difficult for me to keep them and the motives for certain actions or inactions straight. In addition to Jaron, his friends (particularly Roden and Tobias—I was continuously asking myself “Are their decisions and plans truly independent of his, as they claim, or are they working together from a behind-the-scenes conversation we didn’t see?”—and Mott, once Trea, another excellent new character, is introduced), the pirates, the Prozarians and Darius were all active participants in decision-making, thus constantly shifting the chessboard. Also, keeping track of who was captured, who wasn’t, and where people were versus where they were supposed to be got a little muddled. I fear in my haste to see what happened next, I didn’t pay as close attention to details and take the time to process them as I should have. For readers reading it for the first time, while I definitely understand the desire to devour it as quickly as possible like I did, I highly recommend making sure you take the time to keep track of, understand and process who’s doing what, and why. When I reread it, I will definitely be more conscious of that!
And the end…oh the end. It was beautiful and immensely satisfying, far more so than I could have imagined. I absolutely loved how we see the chess pieces come together, and that Jaron found a way to work with his friends instead of against them. Together, they freed Belland from the Prozarians and procured the tools for the treasure hunt that drove the Prozarians to orchestrate all the trouble in the first place.
Jennifer Nielsen has once again gifted us with her storytelling skill, inviting us to embark on a thrilling escapade with some of our favorite characters, full of all the action, twists, turns, close calls and humor that we love. I cannot wait for the rest of her fans to discover this latest adventure, and I am stoked to see what comes next!