There's a spark of magic in your eyes / Candyland appears each time you smile / Never thought that fairy tales came true / But they come true, when I'm near you (Betcha By Golly, Wow – The Stylistics).
Hey, I like this author now. That’s pretty cool, huh? I don’t know, I’m just happy at the moment because... I’ll be honest, I wasn’t really a big fan of F.T. Lukens’ first two books. I mean, yeah, I gave them quite a few stars, but my rating mostly reflected what I wanted out of those types of queer YA fantasy rather than a glowing recommendation of the work at hand. Besides, I'm usually a lot harsher in my head than what I actually end up putting down in these reviews, so my memory of So This is Ever After and the pirate one definitely isn’t as positive as a I might have outwardly come across as. Well, I was wrong to judge so soon! My rating for this book is as honest as I can possibly be. The most honest four stars out there! Both Otherworldly and the one before it, Spellbound, are legit masterpieces and I’ll be the first to say I’m sorry... because now I’m feeling sorry. There’s probably some kind of life lesson to be found here somewhere. Hm, let’s see if I could place it… one or two flops doesn’t mean you will remain a flop? Quick, somebody tell Katy Perry that it's not too late! Okay, enough shade, here's what I learned from this book: “find it in your heart to never be flopphobic.” Moving on though, Otherworldly is a really great book. F.T. Lukens might just have put every bit of magic you could possibly put into a novel, and it really felt like they've concocted a brew specifically catered to me! It was actually the tiniest bit annoying to the contrarian part of me that went into this with certain preconceived notions! But nope, this book really is just that good. They've got me! A few pages in and I was already like “Oh alright, this book is for me.” And that’s a feeling I usually don’t get anymore while reading YA! It's nice. Firstly, I loved how the book has a beautiful yet narratively oppressive setting with this whole “Land of Forever Winter” thing going on. I think winter is a good backdrop for a blooming relationship because it’s the season that can most easily be used to represent decay, impending doom, or stagnation (like in Game of Thrones or Beauty and the Beast), which helps to make the romance shine that much brighter. The one source of warmth in a land that’s constantly shivering. Speaking of romance, this book wouldn't have been as awesome as it is without the two charming romantic leads; a rebellious magical being, Knox, who just wants to “be a real boy” and the jaded, yet hopeful Ellery, whose trust issues make their relationship with faith a fraught one. They were both wonderful characters (which is saying something, because I’m the “complains-about-the-love-interest-guy), but I especially found myself relating to Ellery. From their predisposition towards suspicion to the way they’d go all “Demand me nothing; what you know, you know. From this time forth I never will speak word”- nonverbal at house parties, I can’t lie that I saw a lot of myself in them. And a mirror image, relatable, character is not always the most comfortable thing to confront in literature, but this time it was cool because their personality isn’t something that’s portrayed as something that needs to change. They could definitely lighten up a little, sure, but there’s nothing wrong with them, and I just think that that’s a good lesson to have in any book that has a lesson, let alone a YA book.
Though, I will say that if I were asked, I’d probably say that I slightly prefer Spellbound to this one. For one, this book had two too many annoying characters for my taste. And it didn’t help that they kept popping up whenever Ellery and Knox were having a moment! Go away, dude! Remember when I said that winter is a useful metaphor for stagnation and loneliness and blah blah (please refer to paragraph one of this two-paragraph review), well I also think these kinds of stories work best when the focus remains almost entirely on two characters only. It’s why All That’s Left in the World is perfect (and maybe why the sequel isn't? I don't know, I’m still reading it). It’s just two people getting to know each other at the end of the world. It never really needs to be about anything else. Now, I know that this book isn’t an apocalypse novel (maybe it should have been), but hey, neither is Before Sunrise and that has the similar vibe I'm looking for! I just think that Ellery's cousin and her girlfriend didn’t really do much other than offer comic relief. And the thing with comic relief characters is that you’re supposed to remove them from the story whenever some real shit is going down! Like, Ellery’s cousin and her girlfriend are literally always there, always along for the ride, but because they don’t really take part in the story in any meaningful way other than owning the apartment they all stay in, they're really just delegated to making quips and lessening the drama of the story. There’s this weird tonal shift whenever something beautiful is happening in the story and you've got these two chuckling dorks over in the corner cracking jokes and making light of anything resembling a serious situation. I had to check a couple times if I accidentally picked up a T.J. Klune book instead! Ellery and Knox will be getting their asses kicked by Ring Wraiths in some alleyway and the cousin and her girlfriend are just inside the club right next to them, only to later be like “Omg, what happened!?” when they find Ellery all bruised up. Or how about when some weird sketchy guy is trying to hook up with Ellery at the aforementioned house party (please refer to the first paragraph of this two-paragraph review) and nobody's looking out for them when they’re taken to a second location! And when they find Ellery, they’re all like… you guessed it, “Omg, what happened!?” Like, take a wild guess!! They’re the ones who convinced Ellery, a person who notoriously hates parties, to go to this thing and they completely abandon them the second they arrive?! Okay look, while I think this author is quickly becoming one of my favorites because they’ve mostly ditched the Marvel humor, there are obviously still a few remnants. It doesn’t help that a lot of the humor is Charley (the cousin, I just remembered her name) purposefully embarrassing Ellery in front of Knox. Maybe this is just me projecting, but after the fifth time, I just wanted to reach in the book and tell her to back off, for real. Anyway, tangent aside, this book was great! There are some stories that you just know are going to grip you by the throat emotionally, and when I learned that Knox would lose his memories upon returning to his magical realm, I just knew that this would be one of those ones! Yeah sure, it’s a little predictable how love will be the one thing that… (spoiler alert, but come on haha) helps him remember, but it was so sweet and beautifully written that I couldn’t find it in myself to eternal-sunshine-of-the-spotless-mind at all. Beautiful book. You might even say it’s out of this world! It’s almost like it’s otherwo-
“Make a wise choice, Knox, you may not like all the consequences.”
“No, I might love them instead.”