The beginning of LAST STAR BURNING was a lot like trying to start a fire with wet wood; what should come easy is instead a lot of work and leaves you feeling frustrated right at the onset. In keeping with the comparison, the middle did seem to burn, the flames catching and leaving you feeling satisfied and warm, excited and delighted. But the end was more in tune with a bitchy gust of wind.. suddenly there's smoke in your face and you're left feeling a little betrayed, uncertain, and squinty-eyed.
"Everyone gets a fair chance in the Mountain. Wood Rats, City runaways, people from out past this forest.. no stars, no brands, and no one cares who you are or what you look like."
Sangster's debut has an interesting premise that sounds fantasy but isn't really. Instead this is a dystopian novel with sci-fi elements. This is likely one of the reasons why I had such a hard time getting into the story.. I was expecting something else. Also, I felt the beginning in general just didn't work for me. Between resetting my expectations, trying to understand the hierarchy of the caste system (Firsts ruling the roost and attempting to cure a rampant sickness, Seconds serving as armed forces both inside and out, Thirds basically slaves, Fourths being traitors) and how it fit into this concept of this tiny nation cut off from the world, in addition to some kind of plague that basically turned people rabid, and then being in the head of a girl who was once a First and is now a Fourth due to her mother's betrayal to an outside nation they were at war with.. it was just a lot of things. Throw in conspiracy where she's set up as a terrorist, a mysterious boy who knows much and is willing to leave his cushy First life to save her, and an rebel group on the outside that holds both answers and shelter.. it's even more things.
"Whatever happened during the Great Wars, everyone left over just wants to survive. I don't think having light-coloured eyes should take away your right to a good life any more than having the wrong number of lines on your hand should."
It's hard to touch on the plot without going into potentially spoilery events. However, things kind of go in an expected way when it comes to the romance. Sev's been crushing on the best friend, a Second who has still stood by her despite her fall from grace, but the introduction of a boy who represents everything she's learned to distrust, who has secrets (that she never pushes for, ugh), who protects her and sees past the birthmark on her face and the betrayal of her mother, has her letting go of the things that might have been between she and her longtime friend. While the romance(s) are not a huge part of the story, nonetheless they do kind of go in a rather predictable fashion. There's also a SLEEPING BEAUTY element/retelling woven throughout the story.. but not in the way you'd think.
I've had the word 'traitor' chasing after my name since I was eight. Now someone is treating me as though I'm worth something, and I've been ignoring how weird that is.
There were, however, some twists and turns, some plots and conspiracies, that weren't as predictable. There were times when I thought I knew who was pulling strings and why and while some times I was right there were also times I was wrong, and occasionally I was even fooled into thinking I was right about why I was right. The downside to everyone around the main character keeping secrets, lying, omitting information, etc, is that upon the reveals you end up disliking them. But that doesn't suddenly make you root for a protagonist who takes everything lying down and just cracks jokes all the time. I don't even know why she was made to do that or why it was something worth noting or admiring.
I am not my stars, whatever most people believe.
There was a lot of strength to Sangster's novel but sadly I didn't enjoy it as much as I hoped. A lot of mystery could have been solved earlier had our heroine cared or pushed enough to ask questions instead of waiting for the information to just fall into her lap when the plot called for it to. And I just felt a lot of scenes to be confusing or unexplained while other parts felt out of place or thrown in for no reason (seriously, the dancing thing, I just don't understand). That being said, this had shades of DIVERGENT and The 100 and even, sorta, Resident Evil but set against an Asian setting and background. I appreciate the diversity, the mishmash of genres with a bit of horror creeping through the sci-fi, but I'll admit I'm only going to be reading on to the second book to find out what's going on with one of the secondary characters and because there's another I fell in love with who does kick ass and does get shit done. I can't exactly call this one a win but it's also not a total loss?
2 "wow, what a ringing endorsement" stars
** I received an ARC from Edelweiss and the publisher (thank you!) in exchange for an honest review. **