Disclaimer; I attended a worldbuilding session, as led by this author, at the 2019 Maryland Writers Association Conference. I was intrigued by her fantasy series, and then I won the first book through a GoodReads Giveaway! And she signed it, too!
So I feel bad for only giving this three stars, but really my rating is much closer to 3.5. There is a lot of intriguing worldbuilding in here, Easter eggs that link back to real world sources, and set up for the next installments of the Third Realm War. That being said, I wish there was more character development.
Not necessarily for our protagonist, Adem. We are inside of Adem’s head and are privy to his tumultuous, Hamlet-like angst and indecision. Adem is a golem, in a generalized definition of the concept. I’m Jewish, and somewhat cultured in Judaism as well (I’m no all-knowing scholar but I’m not a “Larry David Jew” either. :P) So I reserve the right to nitpick a little. But anywho. Adem is a golem, meaning that he has a human maker who created him from clay (or mud…get it?) and bound him to a singular purpose. Namely, he has to protect a mysterious “box” that, for centuries, the Hunters have been trying to wrest from him. (Whenever the Hunters touch the box, Adem is supernaturally compelled to kill them. Speaking of supernatural, Adem is also immortal and a self-healer, eg golem traits.)
Adem lives in an authoritarian city called Epoh in a broader post-apocalyptic world called Terath. Terath used to be ruled by gods, but these gods abandoned their creatures (the humans, anyway) after the First Realm War. Things have more or less been going to hell in a handbasket since, and Epoh thinks it’s the only civilized place left. Not so, Adem finds out, when he teams up with the enigmatic (and possibly messianic?) boy, Joran, and his sister, Miriam. The whole set up and execution of these relationships felt a bit rushed to me. To be honest, I didn’t connect much with any of the relationships, though Wenstrom kept the intrigue going. An angel came to Adem and tempted him to complete a favor in the underworld for a price the golem couldn’t refuse. (Adem, much like Pinocchio, wants to be a real boy.) Of course the quest is far less straightforward and far more expansive than Adem would have guessed.
I suppose, out of all the secondary characters, I was drawn most to the ones whom Adem encountered in the Underworld. Maybe because their motivations were the most relatable with regards to familial obligation and revenge. I thought I’d be more interested in Jordan, especially after reading about him in my Page 112 Tag on BookTube. But alas, he may be a Chosen One, but his presence in the narrative was too fleeting for me to get much of an impression. I suppose this is a danger of the Chosen One trope (which I am also writing into my own fantasy project, mind.) We can’t let their Awesome Fates stand in for more traditional character development.
So, I liked it, over all. Definitely a fun, propulsive read. But other than some props to some worldbuilding elements, as a fantasy story it strikes me as middle of the road. Maybe more compulsive stuff will come in later installments! But…#somuchtoread! Oy.