Giving a summary of the plot is a bit complicated for me because I was born wordy. We're in a world where the Gods don't seem to listen to people anymore. There's a people of oppressors, the Adan, keeping a people with magic, the Jin, in their leash. While the cycle is changing from the Raven to the Wolf, a pair of twins are born from the Jin people: the one under Raven, Joory, holds a powerful magic; the one under Wolf, Fen Jacin-rei, is an Untouchable, a Ghost, a Catalyst, or, as one character explains:
The pin in the crux of the fulcrum that would shake the world. [...] The divine breath of inspiration. All sums dividing into Zero [...]. Pure potential. Neither good nor evil, but always the capability for either or both. Always with one foot hovering over the abyss.
Pure potential. My favorite concept when I studied philosophy. My book, I can't help thinking. Untouchables are both divine and wretched creatures. No one can touch them because it could alter the course of their existence, and therefore the fate of the world. Also, they hear the voices of their Ancestors, talking to them constantly and making them go mad.
Fen is taken away from his family by Asai, a man belonging to the Adan with goals that are not clear. He tries to teach Fen to control the voices, he makes a warrior out of him, dangling the safety of his family in fron of him and taking advantage on the boy's crush on him, until he does something that makes Fen leave.
The mysterious Malick, the leader of a gang of assassins with a troubled past, is sent by the elusive Mage to capture Fen and make him a part of their group. Fen is reclusive, focused on his personal quest to save his mother and his siblings, he tries to control everything around him, because it's the only way he can keep his sanity and function. Malick is attracted to the pretty Ghost, he can read the passion in the other man's eyes, but at the same time he needs Fen, because he could be the mean to reach someone Malick wants to take a revenge on. So Fen finds himself close to someone who can treat him as an equal, but he also knows he could be a pawn of someone else's schemes. He has to cede control in order to reach his own goal.
Fen is a character that holds a lot of contradictions. Asai has been able to control him using guilt, making him strive for perfection and setting goals he was sure Fen would fail. Fen should be a mess, but there's a core of strength in him, even if it's all projected to the outside: there's almost nothing Fen does for himself. When Malick arrives, though, set on his seduction, he allows Fen to feel something freely, to experience the silence, the quiet of the voices and to relinquish his control, let someone else love him, allow someone else to have him and see him, naked in body and need, because maybe Fen starts to realize that he is someone when Malick takes care of him.
The story is told with multiple point of views. Fen is the absolute protagonist. The other characters add their own stories and their privileged point of view of what's going on between Fen and Malick. If you want to read this book, you have to know that you'd probably want to invest on the whole series, because there are many questions that will probably have their answers only at the end. This first book is told alternating flashbacks to the current storyline. I am not a big fan of flashbacks, but they didn't annoy me, because they took the place of a possible info-dumping. The writing was beautiful, not because it was poetic or flashy, but because it seemed simple with sudden, powerful insights. The anticipation was so fine and when Fen gave himself to Malick it was beautiful without being exceedingly hot, just fine, beautiful.
Fen is a great character, I hope he won't rely too much on other people, not even Malick, but I know it's inevitable things will go much worse before getting better. I'll wait a little bit before reading the next book, I don't want to burn out. The story is not exactly fast-paced, so I guess diluting it would make me enjoy it more. I really liked it.