Awaking from her dream that is now surmounting the realm of normal dreams, in order to become more like the nightmares she'd been trying to learn to live with for much of her remembered life, eighteen year old Eden quickly records the 'borderline' evaluation in her trusty journal. The nightmares started after a harrowing experiences in the sixth year of her life. Her child mind had created what it needed in order to have her be able to live with the memory of those events. Whilst her mother had once been there when it woke her, holding her hand whilst the screaming and tossing-and-turning finally resolved, there to offer typical platitudes insisting the nightmarish visions were nothing more than the urban mythology of the boogeyman filling a child's subconscious. They could accept the concludions drawn by the police and other services called the night it started, so why couldn't she.
Twelve years later Eden now knew to trust her diary more than the umpteenth therapists and well wishers, of which her parents were included. Changes in the ways she defined herself together with any number of combinations in medications ,both herbal and chemical, usually held at bay the extent to which the dreams more closely reflected the events. Having the normal sorts of anxious dreams were a relief. Escalation always happened unless she could redefine herself drastically enough to reshape the anxious content of her dreams. Moving away from reflections of that night to the sorts that plague young people, especially those unpopular amongst their peers, was alright with her as they didn't lead to risks in the safety of the people around her.
Restocking and altering the medications needed to tranquilise her mind enough to have dreamless sleep was her contingency plan. Eden doesn't care if she didn't dream at all. In the absence of both of her self-taught control mechanisms she became a risk to herself, to friends and family, and to neighbours close enough for the fire to reach. Visions of a dark confined space where she was locked during the abduction attempt on her life led to the burning of a horrific man as viewed by the mind of a six year girl old scared beyond her wits. Her nightmarish memories hadn't changed even a little bit since that time. Six years later though, at the age of twelve, the escalation from borderline to at risk again, resulted in the burning of her home. Therein lies the risk she poses to people's safety.
Smoldering bits and pieces turned out to be more common in the end, slumber parties wuickly became a thing of the past. Too dangerous for the social reject now defined by her medical files as a sleepwalking pyromaniac. As if redefining herself beyond the point that most friends were able to adjust to, leaving an ever decreasing number of close friends wasn't enough, then the looks of weirdness or sympathy capped it off. School corridors and neighbourhood footpaths, together with shopping mall runways become places she was an expert at watching the foot of the other pedestrians. Hoping to avoid a connection with others' eyes, the sympathetic looks were the hardest to deal with. In those looks she became forever defined by what happened instead of who she is; the same looks that were the most resistant to changes made to who she is.
So it is that Eden was once again hoping that the upcoming changes led by a move halfway across the country to a new place, new home, new school, new friends and people, would be the ticket to a window of time that allows the risks to decrease. Upheaval of her life held the hope that'd keep her dreams away from evil men and dark confined places, the components of her dreams that led to the random combustion of things in the vicinity of where she sleeps. The 'full-ride-new-start' scholarship she'd won without actually applying for it now had her near future set on a path to Coventry House. At Whitland College she hoped she would get through the sorority placement system to obtain a permanent residency, a stipulation of her scholarship. Being a pledge was never foreseen in her future. With her scale of weirdness, the unpopular volunteering in animal shelters and soup kitchens as perceived by her peers, on top of the tuition fees and costs of living away from home, had kept that prospective contemplation from ever entering the equation.
After getting through the sad goodbyes and a flight, Eden makes her first friend before leaving the airport to board the shuttle bus to campus and then on to Coventry House Mansion. The initial success began framing her new four word mantra - full ride new start - as a potentially positive change hitherto seen in the past twelve years. Sarah, the new acquaintance shaping up to be best friend material, also has things in her past that made her different. Not that she or any others are ready yet to share this with their fellow pledging peers, if ever at all. Unlike Eden the ramifications at this early stage were mostly restricted to just the relationship she shared with her mother. Choices of public life being mandated by a zealot of catholic faith, and the sins Sarah would burn for unless she acquiesced to the attitudes and wishes of her mother. The whole scenario smarted her at every opportunity and had led to enough shame to last a lifetime, and yet they were where none should be. Thus she'd suffered the conclusions of weirdness much like Eden, those that had prevented her from enjoying her childhood and adolescent years as they should. Only in her case it wasn't what her peers projected on to her, it was the feelings that began with herself.
Unbeknownst the number of girls attempting the regime of pledging this year at Coventry doesn't limit the similarities to just the two aforementioned candidates. Hannah, Jules, Paige and Rebecca, to name some but not all, further exemplified some of the factors that the college recruiter for Coventry, Caroline, specifically sought for places at her house. A four story Mansion on the farthest edge of the land pertaining to Whitland campus. The opening days of events, that fortunately replaced the typical hazing used by sorority and frat houses to weed out the ones deemed unsuitable, shapes up instead to be inexplicable tests that only the legacy candidate (Rebecca) among them had an inkling of why they were being carried out. But even Rebecca's mother, sworn to secrecies extracted from her during her past time at Coventry, couldn't prepare them. Rebecca liked being a bitch and thus shared very little to nothing with the other candidates, but when pushed she adds only that 'everything is a test'..
For the pledges able to push past the uncomfortable weirdness scale of their mounting tests, they would progress to something dazzling and wonderful, whilst being provocative and potentially dangerous. Many pledges at Coventry are given windows into what might make them weird to others, but concurrently makes them special but no longer unique when compared to their potential new housemates. They'd receive handbooks of increasing difficulty and practicality, more theory to begin with. Some would struggle with the theory, or the practical, or both further still. The need for balance would present both sides of forces unseen by nearly all their peers and hopefully they'd learn where the middle road led in the jungle of possibilities.
As is often the case when magic becomes involved channelers can chose to turn to it to answer the current conundrum and thereby force outcomes that should never have been attempted when using magic. The whole point of the lengthy theory is not so much about the how and what to use, for this pertains to the practical guide, it is instead more about the why and when to use it. Ignoring any one to the exclusion of the other is a recipe for disaster when dealing with irreparable mistakes in the worst case scenario, or reasons for privileges to be revoked in the best case scenario. For the former has the potential to damage and hurt others whilst the latter has the same for just oneself. Neither are acceptable and pledges would sometimes be given enough rope to hang themselves.
As in life, there are those that choose the dichotomous endpoints of black and white. Either unable or unwilling to see the varying shades of grey in between the rope tying those two endpoints together. As they each progress they begin facing situations that deal in the secrets and shame of their pasts. Facing continual contexts of where learning to trust is the hardest thing to do causes the girls to sink or swim. As yet unknown, the pivotal choices that fate and destiny adamently require they face continues to present themselves. Only in dealing with certain issues will they likely cause the cessation of tests that reflect the same sorts of problems on replay. For Eden particularly, the missing honesty over the things labelled as being embarrassing and worthy of shame, continue to spiral in ways that make getting past her issues harder and harder; soon resulting in choices she knows to be wrong and damaging. Until she can learn to take a chance by trusting others with the knowledge, then Eden is more particularly open to unseen ramifications in the choices she makes. But she is not alone in that, her closest friends and acquaintances in the house all face similar situations.
Eden certainly shapes the central storyline but there's no shortage of other view points and perceptions to reshape the model had it been seen only through her eyes. Most of the characters are at a junction in the road that paves their lives and will lead them in any number of directions from here on out. Most were chosen to pledge for Coventry House based on the apt naming of the house once the excess pieces are chipped away, those revealed by the selection processes. They each have question marks and mysteries that vary from the most benign to the most malignant. The influences that lay in either the shadow or the light, and of course somewhere in between, have intricately and inherently altered past experiences and therefore possible futures. What's always been considered the figment of a traumatised girl's imagination is closing in around her. Whether her friends and fellow sisters will be caught in cross fire or as collateral damage might depend mostly on how well the girls internalise and adapt to their new lives and the rules by which it operates. At the end of the day it could very well be the thing that posed the perceived greatest shame that is the thing that has the potential to save them.
Some of the girls come to know themselves better than they ever could've had they not found the courage to make certain choices. Seeing the characters' lives unfold in ways that present clues to the reader as much as, and perhaps even more so, when in comparison to the characters, is an intriguing aspect that will come down in some ways to the sleuthing abilities of readers. Mystery thus forms a large component of the characteristics of Christina's new novel. Suspense and action, drama and humour also form central themes of the varying plots for each of the several main characters. Magic of nature and of life is present in every chapter making this urban fantasy the enjoyable experience I'm coming to expect from Christina's work.
Pledge is more than successful enough to warrant further purchases of the budding new series. There isn't a single story of Christina's that haven't entertained to the point of being followed, and I've read them all. Obviously I'm recommending this little treasure and giving it the five stars its due. This new series together with her existing Gateway Trilogy shows an innate ability to use the struggles of strong female roles that reflect the often hardest psychological trauma to get past. This makes the stories that much more intuitive to read. Reading the experiences of Christina's girls in both series teaches you about the misconceptions of life and leave each reading in a place where they have further insights they missed in life before reading her books.
The title of the book might lead readers to any number of presumptions regarding content but its important to know that its about many things more than just the indoctrination of pledges into a house devoted to something much larger than the usual sorts of things that coincide with it. Thankfully it has mostly ignored the status symbol rankings of sister or brother as they each respectively relate to sororities and fraternities. Those dynamics are present of course, you couldn't tell such a story without including similar themes. But, its more about several very different people who each struggle greatly with what makes them different. Through magic they come to decide whether its ethically right or wrong to use what they yet do not fully understand to achieve their goals.
Its easy to sit back and think that someone made their mistakes with the best intentions at heart, or didn't mean for something to take place, or even that they were justified in wanting whichever thing that led to such outcomes. But through this all there's one fundamental reality that isn't being grasped fully or properly when making such conclusions. So there are inevitably the several instances of differing ways this concept is failed to be grasped and which inevitably weeds out those who aren't prepared to follow the rules; irrespective of any incidentals of those separate cases. In very real ways the fundamental mistakes poetically keep themselves separate from the intent, allowing readers to see for themselves where each went wrong.
The indoctrination is also pleasingly about more than just Magical Studies 101. Its about the fundamental underlying factors of being provided with the chance to do something very special with your life. In an overarching way the ethics and reasons for rules are allowed to play out in separste ways that go toward highlighting how faulty thinking can lead to sometimes drastic consequences, regardless of how ever benign the intentions were to begin with. We've all read more than just the one book on the fundamental concepts of witchcraft and being witches but I have to conclude that I don't recall reading any other that can be said to be similar in the exact same ways. There are difficult to define differences that make Pledge unique. I can only stress in the absence of details to list that this is my impression, for it must also be said that detailing any or all dips into the dangerous path of writing reviews that go farther than commentary, enter into the domain of spoilers: which regardless of intentions needs to be avoided at all costs. A dazzling read where fantasy becomes the platform for real life!