Review courtesy of Dark Faerie Tales
Quick & Dirty: An exciting second installment about Juneau’s adventure that I enjoyed.
Opening Sentence: Miles has been dead for one hour.
The Review:
Juneau is back on the run, and this time she’s starting the journey all alone. Miles died, and although she’s fighting to bring and keep him alive with the Rite, she doesn’t know the side effects of one who is not from her clan undergoing the ceremony. She is still following leads to track down her clans, this time with a renewed belief in the Yara and her connection to it, but she will soon realize that the forces they are up against are more powerful than imagined. They have resources and motivations that could make them deadly, so Juneau must tread carefully, for she has everything to lose.
I really enjoyed Juneau’s character in this second installment. She had a determination and a confidence that she carried herself that made her fun to read about; this is not to say, however, that she was immune from the doubts and worries of having a whole clan’s future resting on her shoulders. I appreciated watching her development and adaptation to the new modern world she had been dragged into unexpectedly. As well as this, her relationship with Miles changed her in ways that I liked watching, and by the end of the novel she had found renewed courage and strength. As a reader, she was an interesting point of view, and I found her spin on everything refreshing – after all, it was through the eyes of one who had never known modern comforts.
Miles was the love interest and second point of view that I was following. In the last book, I believe I found him somewhat lazy and a deadweight, and in this novel you really see him transition both mentally and physically to a helpful force to Juneau’s cause. He also grew into himself, and developed into a character with much more confidence who was a match to Juneau. I really liked this change and how Juneau inspired it, and it gave a nice nod to how their relationship inspired each other to become better. Speaking of the relationship, I still was a fan of the love story, and I found it moved at a good pace and not the insta-love often found in young adult novels that I’ve grown to dislike.
There were new plot developments in this second installment, as well as continuations of the first book. For example, Juneau’s connection with the earth – although she seemed to redeem it by the end of the first book, new ideas brought to light in the second lead to her questioning it all over again. Juneau leading the clan was also a constant, as she felt the duty to save her people and that carried her decisions throughout the series. It seemed like an awful amount of pressure for a teenage girl, but Juneau being Juneau, she handled it admirably. New characters were revealed, and motivations of already known ones were revealed. I appreciate knowing backstories of the antagonists in novels because it gives their actions an explanation, so knowing more about Whit was a welcome addition to this second book.
Altogether, I really did enjoy this novel and this series. I think the first book had a lot more worldbuilding and was an entry to the plotline and introduction to the characters. As such, I liked the second book better than the first, as it had more action and twists. The characters were all strong and had lots of depth. It was a really easy book to follow, and very readable; both point of views were interesting, and I never felt bored or like the plot had lagged, as I remember doing in the first. There were quite a few reveals as the novel went on, and those twists were fun to read. I would definitely recommend this to fans of the first – I think you will be impressed!
Notable Scene:
My body melts away until there is nothing left but a small white ball, feathers, beak, and a flash of light. And like that, I am sprung into the air. The words of the song grow clearer, and I sense another bird keeping pace with me, just outside my vision. I flap my wings, banking steeply as we climb together, high over the endless ocean. We catch the wind and soar.
FTC Advisory: HarperTeen provided me with a copy of Until the Beginning. No goody bags, sponsorships, “material connections,” or bribes were exchanged for my review.