Star Rating: 4 stars
Note: This is the final volume in the Foxcraft trilogy so this will not be an in-depth review.
To break up some of the epic fantasy that I was reading, I decided to pick up one of my guilty pleasure reads- animal-centered fantasy. I love how writers can take an animal that we know and love (cats, wolves, dogs, foxes, bears, owls, mice etc.) and give them personalities and complex societies with religion and social stratification, in effect, create a fantasy world where they are the forefront and humans take a back seat if they are even there at all. Anyway, the animal fantasy I decided to pick up this time was the final volume in the Foxcraft trilogy, The Mage, by Inbali Iserles. This volume wraps up the story of Isla and her journey to find her brother, Pirie, after an evil group of foxes called the Taken lead by an individual called the Mage invade their home, kill their family, and cause Isla and Pirie to flee everything that they know and become separated. Over the course of her journey to find her brother, Isla has made some amazing discoveries about herself, fox-kind, and fox-craft (the magic that foxes use to co-exist with humans and live in relative freedom).
For a middle-grade book about foxes, you wouldn’t expect to find any ground-breaking themes; however, within the pages of this book, Iserles was tossing around some pretty adult themes if you knew where to look for them. For instance, she set up completely separate but interlocking societies for the different “cubs of Canista,” and through the entire series, but this book especially, she pits individuals of these cultures against each other to see how they [the cultures] would hold up if they were to be viewed side by side. It could be determined that she was using these different animals and their cultures to symbolize the different social structures or power bases in our own society. In other words, she was using her fantasy world to critique society.
To do this, she put a lot of work into developing the different settings and personalities for her characters, and in some respects, she did an awesome job. However, at some points, I think she could have done more. Although, she was able to develop three distinct areas with their own cultures in each, we didn’t always get a clear picture all the time. She gave us enough to know that the different individuals of Canista have different social structures and ways of looking at the world, but she doesn’t really flesh that out as well as she could. If the book or series was longer, she would have been able to give us more and she would be able to develop her story better. She would have her characters refer to some part of their mythos or their society but she wouldn’t explain its significance so it would be missed because she wasn’t able to fine tune everything like she would have been able to do if the book or series was longer as previously mentioned. I hope that Iserles decides to expand this series or this world because she can use those books to flesh out things she wasn’t able to with this trilogy.
All in all, it was a great ending to a series that has the potential to be expanded and to become something amazing. 4 stars!